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Jenny L. Small – About Campus, 2024
White Christian supremacy, by definition an intersectional system of oppression, has influenced all aspects of American society since the time before the country's founding, as it was used to justify the stealing of native lands through colonization and the enslavement of African peoples. White Christian supremacist influences persist today, even…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Advantaged, Christianity, Racism
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Okello, Wilson Kwamogi; Duran, Antonio A.; Pierce, Eva – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2023
In an interview with Randall Kenan, Octavia E. Butler extracts the harsh realities of history and its effects on the present, stating, "I couldn't let her come back whole… Antebellum slavery didn't leave people quite whole." (Kenan, Callaloo, 1991, 14, p. 498). This quote refers to her book, Kindred (1979) in which the protagonist, Dana,…
Descriptors: Slavery, Racism, Higher Education, Individual Development
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Neel, Michael A.; Aumen, Jared – Social Education, 2022
As Americans contend with the question of which statues and markers belong (or don't) on public land, government leaders, civic groups, and citizens must be prepared to engage these conversations and answer a range of related questions. In this article, the authors view arguments over public statues--statues of persons that reside on public…
Descriptors: Historic Sites, Sculpture, United States History, Thinking Skills
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Willis, Arlette Ingram – Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2023
The Library of Congress has acquired the Omar ibn Said Collection, including an exceptional artifact, the autobiography of Omar ibn Said, written in ancient Arabic by an African enslaved man. In this article, I analytically examine the role of literacy in Omar ibn Said's life as informed by African cultures, ethnicities, histories, languages, and…
Descriptors: Literacy, Authors, Arabic, Autobiographies
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Lemke, Melinda – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2019
Despite its significance as a policy issue, there is a paucity of knowledge about trafficking within educational policy and leadership research. The lack of research in this area and the contemporary spike in displaced youth populations necessitates examining those policies that aim to prevent trafficking through educational mediums. This study…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, State Policy, Crime, Crime Prevention
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Kaifu, Chen – English Language Teaching, 2019
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" is a reputed anti-slavery novel in American literary history. Tom, an unusually loyal and submissive slave, was sold to different slave masters again and again until he was tortured to death. Tom's tragic fate had multi-faceted roots. This paper tends to give an objective interpretation of Tom's personality so as to…
Descriptors: Novels, Slavery, United States History, Personality Traits
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Kuthy, Diane – Art Education, 2022
Freedom for most of the 4 million enslaved Black Americans in the United States was not granted when Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863. Freedom came about in numerous ways and at different times. The status of Maryland's enslaved population was not decided until October 1864, when a statewide referendum on a…
Descriptors: Freedom, Civil Rights, Slavery, African Americans
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Ebanks, Neila-Ann – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2022
"Q: "What time is it?" A: "Skin, past flesh, goin' on to bone."" As descendants of stolen Black bodies in the 'New World', many dancing Jamaicans have become living anachronisms, unconsciously embodying retentions of life-renewing cultural movement practices past spirit and bone, into flesh and skin. Jamaican tertiary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Dance Education, Cultural Maintenance
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Lynch, Raven E.; Meshelemiah, Jacquelyn C. A.; Casassa, Kaitlin – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
Social work field placements are considered the signature pedagogy of the social work profession. Traditionally, students are placed in a single agency for the academic year. Given that antitrafficking intervention is fairly new to the social work profession, interns may not be able to get the most out of an experience in a single agency. Using…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Teaching Methods, Student Placement
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Hobbs, Angela H. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
Statues are in the news. Controversies are swirling around the slave trader and philanthropist Edward Colston in Bristol, Confederate generals, soldiers and leaders in the United States, and the sculpture in honour of Mary Wollstonecraft in Newington Green in North London. In some cases, the attacks have been physical as well as verbal, and such…
Descriptors: Sculpture, Historic Sites, Democracy, News Reporting
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Clark, Koren – Montessori Life: A Publication of the American Montessori Society, 2021
This article is a conversation with Juliet King, EdD, the AMS 2022 Living Legacy. Dr. King began her career in South Florida some five decades ago, teaching in Miami-Dade County when public schools were beginning to desegregate. She transferred to an inner-city school with a Title I Montessori program; this was her first introduction to the…
Descriptors: Montessori Schools, Montessori Method, History, Racial Discrimination
Tariq Qasim – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The 2014 genocide against the Yazidi community, perpetrated by ISIS, represents one of the most devastating humanitarian crises of the 21st century. This qualitative case study explores the lived experiences of Yazidi women, aged 25-40, who have resettled in Nebraska after surviving unspeakable atrocities, including mass killings, sexual…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Coping, Cultural Context, Victims of Crime
Bellamy, Brittany Nichole – ProQuest LLC, 2023
While the completion of a baccalaureate degree is the gateway to a greater quality of life in areas of employment, health, housing, civic engagement, mortality, and economic wealth, the college experience for Black American students is typically coupled with the accumulation of a disproportionately high amount of student loan debt. While the most…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Blacks, African American Students, Student Loan Programs
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Drake, Janine Giordano; Cohen, Robert – Social Education, 2022
If high school history courses are meant to introduce students to the paradoxes and debates of American history, then they should study the 1619 Project, the authors argue in this article. College history students regularly debate the extent to which slavery was formative to the development of American systems of law, business, medicine, religion…
Descriptors: High School Students, History Instruction, United States History, African American History
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Parsons, Carl – Whiteness and Education, 2022
Racisms are plural, taking different forms in different countries, subject to change in focus and intensity over time. Colonialism and slavery influence attitudes and policies in both countries through to modern times. In examining the British and American contexts, one needs to particularise by (a) country, (b) ethnicities, (c) histories, (d)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Racism, Educational Practices
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