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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Thais Council; Shakale George; Rebecca Graham; Shae Earls – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
We argue that gentrification is school pushout by a different name, displacing Black children and families through multiple modes of hypersurveillance, invisibility, criminalization, and disposability. We share vivid frontline experiences as Black women educators and a Jewish American woman educator while foregrounding the multiple ways in which…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, African American Students, Urban Education
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Alicea, Julio Angel – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2023
This study examines often-overlooked youth perspectives on the sociospatial changes happening in a community experiencing Black displacement, mass Latinx immigration, and impending gentrification. To date, studies of complex urban change rarely consider the ways in which young people perceive and produce place differently from adults. Drawing on…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Social Change, Urban Youth, African Americans
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Archie Thomas – Critical Studies in Education, 2024
Schooling has been a site of harm for Indigenous people in settler colonial contexts, as a tool of dispossession, assimilation and separation from country and kin. However, schools have simultaneously been sites to work against this and build alternatives to settler colonial systems that nourish Indigenous futures. This article centers the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Colonialism, Educational Policy
Tarlau, Rebecca – Oxford University Press, 2019
Over the past thirty-five years the Brazilian Landless Workers Movement (MST), one of the largest social movements in Latin America, has become famous globally for its success in occupying land, winning land rights, and developing alternative economic enterprises for over a million landless workers. The movement has also linked education reform to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Change, Educational Change, Land Settlement
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Ferreira, Rosemary – Journal of Student Affairs, New York University, 2020
While the literature on the experiences of working-class Students of Color at selective, historically White institutions has grown significantly over the past twenty-five years, how this student population is making sense of their social class identity as they gain access to dominant cultural and social capital at their institutions remains…
Descriptors: Working Class, Minority Group Students, Social Class, Self Concept
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Beadie, Nancy – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2020
The economic and environmental significance of school land policy in the United States has yet to be imagined, let alone systematically studied, by scholars. Although the fact that Congress allocated shares of public lands to the support of schools beginning in the 1780s is well known, historians have not adequately assessed the impacts of that…
Descriptors: Land Use, Educational History, Public Policy, Natural Resources
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Patel, Lisa – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2014
In this theoretical article, I argue for a relational stance on learning as a way of reckoning with educational research as part of the settler colonial structure of the United States. Because of my geopolitical location to the United States as a settler colony, I begin by contrasting the stances of anticolonial and decolonial. I then analyze the…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Political Attitudes, Time Perspective, Land Acquisition
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Sutherland, Lee-Ann – Journal of Rural Studies, 2012
In this paper, processes of gentrification are assessed in relation to non-commercial farming: the production of agricultural commodities without the intent of earning a living. The author argues that due to the connection between residence and productive assets (particularly land) inherent in farming, agricultural gentrification represents a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Agricultural Occupations, Farm Management, Agricultural Production
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Reichenbach, Michael; Hagen Jokela, Becky; Sagor, Eli – Journal of Extension, 2013
Recognizing intergenerational differences sets the stage for sharing and learning across the generations. An intergenerational land transfer education class was designed to engage families around the issue of parcelization and development of forested lands. A post-class survey of the Intergenerational Land Transfer class was used to evaluate…
Descriptors: Generational Differences, Land Acquisition, Family Programs, Participant Satisfaction
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Huff, Tristan – Journal of Extension, 2014
Google Earth is an accessible, user-friendly GIS that can help landowners in their management planning. I offered hands-on Google Earth workshops to landowners to teach skills, including mapmaking, length and area measurement, and database management. Workshop participants were surveyed at least 6 months following workshop completion, and learning…
Descriptors: Geographic Information Systems, Land Acquisition, Ownership, Rural Extension
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Krupat, Arnold – American Indian Quarterly, 2011
Indian orators have been saying good-bye for more than three hundred years. John Eliot's "Dying Speeches of Several Indians" (1685), as David Murray notes, inaugurates a long textual history in which "Indians... are most useful dying," or, as in a number of speeches, bidding the world farewell as they embrace an undesired but…
Descriptors: United States History, American Indians, Leaders, Speeches
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Meek, David – Studies in the Education of Adults, 2011
The Landless Workers' Movement (MST) is recognized as Brazil's most successful social movement. Although its goal is agrarian reform, the MST has been the subject of significant educational scholarship due to the emphasis it places on education reform, and formal and informal education. The MST's pedagogy has been extensively analysed. However,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Propaganda, Social Action, Land Acquisition
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Taylor, Christopher – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2010
In Native American literary studies today there is a gap between the variety of criticism being produced and the metacritical debate about what Native literary criticism should look like. A review of recent issues of "Studies in American Indian Literatures", for example, will discover a wide variety of approaches, some relating literary…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Writing (Composition), Nonfiction, Literary Criticism
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Newbery, Liz – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2012
In this paper, I explore how histories of colonialism are integral to the Euro-Western idea of wilderness at the heart of much outdoor environmental education. In the context of canoe tripping, I speculate about why the politics of land rarely enters into teaching on the land. Finally, because learning from difficult knowledge often troubles the…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Outdoor Education, Water, Transportation
Hartlep, Nicholas Daniel – Online Submission, 2010
Notwithstanding that Critical Race Theory (CRT) is currently in its second decade of existence, it is not and has never been something extraordinary--insofar as racism is something that has always been with us. Rather, CRT is a bona fide and avant-garde movement that leads to praxis--explicitly and courageously speaking to the injustices that…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Racial Attitudes, Racial Bias
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