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Teague, Latoya – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
Educators and librarians have a responsibility to capture the transnational border-crossing experiences of all students, including children of the African diaspora. Narratives of African diaspora border crossings disrupt stories of linear migration. These stories feature histories of displacement, trauma, and unbelonging. And yet, they embrace…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Immigration, Immigrants, Trauma
Sun, Jingjing; Goforth, Anisa N.; Nichols, Lindsey M.; Violante, Amy; Christopher, Kelsey; Howlett, Ronda; Hogenson, Debbie; Graham, Niki – Child Development, 2022
Indigenous communities practice survivance and challenge social and political systems to support their children's identity and well-being. Grounded in transformative social-emotional learning (SEL) and tribal critical race theory, this 3-year community-based participatory research study (2019-2021) examined how a SEL program co-created with an…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Social Emotional Learning, Critical Theory, Race
Stanton, Christine – Social Education, 2019
The primary goal of this article is to encourage active confrontation of the settler colonialism that permeates social studies education in a way that encourages a centering of Indigenous experiences, instead of merely de-centering settler experiences. Two questions frame this work: (1) How should social studies educators confront atrocities and…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Teaching Methods, Land Settlement, Foreign Policy
Nakagawa, Satoru; Kouritzin, Sandra – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2021
We suggest that while Indigenous languages are threatened by capitalist and neoliberal encroachments, responses from applied linguists in the academy can be misguided. To make our argument, we must first define neoliberalism, and examine how the broader neoliberal discourses of choice, competition and the free market have percolated and distilled…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Social Systems, Applied Linguistics, Language Maintenance
Skogvang, Bente Ovedie – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2021
The indigenous Riddu Riddu Festival, organized yearly in the village of Olmáivággi/ Manndalen (Sápmi/Norway), presents the cultures of Sámi people and indigenous peoples across the world. A study of the activities offered at Riddu Riddu over an eleven-year period (2009-2019) carried out. Through fieldwork (forty-six in-depth interviews,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Rural Areas, Geographic Regions, Team Sports
Reyes, Nicole Alia Salis – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2018
In this article, I map a new theoretical space for Kanaka Maoli, the autochthonous people of Hawai?i, within the landscape of critical race theory (CRT). To engage the ways that Kanaka Maoli have been identified as people of color, Asian Pacific Islanders, and Indigenous people, I review literature on CRT, Asian critical race theory, and Tribal…
Descriptors: Race, Critical Theory, Foreign Countries, Pacific Islanders
Urrieta, Luis, Jr.; Calderón, Dolores – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2019
This article engages an important, but difficult conversation about the erasure of indigeneity in narratives, curriculum, identities, and racial projects that uphold settler colonial logics that fall under the rubric of Hispanic, Latina/o/x, and Chicana/o/x. These settler colonial logics include violence by these groupings against Indigenous…
Descriptors: American Indians, Hispanic Americans, Land Settlement, Immigrants
Amery, Rob – Current Issues in Language Planning, 2019
Following the invasion, or colonisation as some prefer to call it, Indigenous Australia has been characterised by plummeting populations, largely as a result of introduced diseases and the movement of peoples, following the theft of their lands and in response to colonial and subsequent Australian state and federal government policies. At times,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Languages, Ethnicity
Emenike, Nkechi W.; Plowright, David – Journal of Research in International Education, 2017
This study examines the extent to which indigenous Nigerian students attending international schools in their own country are able to successfully negotiate their identities from conflictual perspectives within their schools and home communities. Using a sample of 66 students aged 12 to 18 years, from two international schools in Nigeria, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, International Schools, Foreign Countries, Self Concept
Doing the Work, Considering the Entanglements of the Research Team While Undoing Settler Colonialism
Lira, Andrea; Muñoz-García, Ana Luisa; Loncon, Elisa – Gender and Education, 2019
This paper presents the work of three researchers in a self-study on researcher positionality using the reflective practice and pedagogy of correspondence as preparation for future work with mapuche women in Chile. We start from the assumption that research with and on indigenous groups has a historical debt to consider given the ways in which it…
Descriptors: Whites, Foreign Policy, Females, American Indians
Francis, Lee, IV; Munson, Michael M. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2017
In an academic system that perpetuates the control and limitation of Indigenous narrative in order to reinforce the Western settler-colonial framework, Francis and Munson aim to create a more appropriate space for Indigenous scholarship. Through conversation, the authors discuss the exploration of sovereign scholar activism through an Indigenous…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Foreign Policy, Land Settlement, Indigenous Populations
Madden, Brooke – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2017
The author traces how discourse functions in the context of a school-based, urban Aboriginal education initiative, with a focus on the construction and organization of teaching subjects. Critical discourse analysis that traces spectres reveals some of the ways that whiteness and Eurocentrism create the possibilities for, and the conditions in…
Descriptors: Whites, Discourse Analysis, Indigenous Populations, Professional Identity
Wood, Megan; Exley, Beryl; Knight, Linda – English in Australia, 2017
This article begins by discussing the Australian Curriculum: English and its remit to contribute to this nation's reconciliation agenda. Ever cognisant of our individual identities as non-Indigenous teachers and teacher educators and our relations to this topic, we hone in on one Content Description from Year 10, and analyse one stimulus text, an…
Descriptors: English Instruction, English Curriculum, National Curriculum, Indigenous Populations
Bodkin-Andrews, Gawaian; Carlson, Bronwyn – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2016
It may be argued that the emerging discourses focusing on the social, emotional, educational, and economic disadvantages identified for Australia's First Peoples (when compared to their non-Indigenous counterparts) are becoming increasingly dissociated with an understanding of the interplay between historical and current trends in racism.…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Self Concept, Indigenous Populations, Pacific Islanders
Quayle, Amy; Sonn, Christopher; Kasat, Pilar – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2016
Community Arts and Cultural Development (CACD) is a form of public pedagogy that seeks to intervene into the reproduction of meaning in public spaces. In this article, we explore the Bush Babies and Elders portrait project that sought to contribute to the empowerment of Aboriginal participants through counter-storytelling. Drawing on interview and…
Descriptors: Art, Community Programs, Empowerment, Self Concept
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