Theorizing Racist Ableism in Higher Education

Danielle C. Mireles
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Background/Context: Although research on the experiences of multiply-marginalized Black and Brown students with dis/abilities in higher education is limited, this growing body of work indicates that these students navigate racialized perceptions of ability, which impact their experiences on college and university campuses. This research highlights the need for intersectional frameworks that consider students’ multiple identities and the limitations of single-identity–focused frameworks. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study: Centering the counternarratives of 10 Black and Brown undergraduate students with dis/abilities across five college and university campuses, this article uses critical race theory (CRT), disability critical race theory (DisCrit), and racist nativism to develop a conceptual framework of racist ableism. Racist ableism bridges CRT, DisCrit, and racist nativism to describe how particular forms of ableism, informed by racist attitudes and beliefs, oppress and dehumanize Black and Brown people based on actual or perceived (or, inversely, lack of perceived) dis/ability, thereby reinforcing the relationship between whiteness and ability. Research Design: I examined the counternarratives of 10 Black and Brown undergraduate students who identified or have the lived experience of dis/ability. Counternarratives allowed me to center the stories of students. I identify three overarching findings: (1) Black and Brown dis/abled students navigated racialized perceptions of intelligence, productivity, and academic capability; (2) Black and Brown dis/abled students were pathologized as lazy and/or deviant, which minimized or erased their access needs; and (3) Black and Brown dis/abled students resisted racist ableist discourses. Conclusions/Recommendations: The counternarratives of students reveal how racialized perceptions of ability shaped their experiences interacting with staff and their ability to access institutional supports such as accommodations. They also reveal the critical raced-disabled epistemologies of Black and Brown students who identify or have been labeled as dis/abled. Their counternarratives highlight the need for: (1) intersectional frameworks that account for the ways in which racism and ableism are interconnected, and (2) race-conscious policies and practices that consider their multidimensional identities.
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高等教育中种族歧视的理论化
背景/背景:尽管对多重边缘化的黑人和棕色人种的残疾学生在高等教育中的经历的研究有限,但越来越多的研究表明,这些学生对能力的种族化看法,影响了他们在学院和大学校园的经历。这项研究强调了考虑学生多重身份的交叉框架的必要性和单一身份关注框架的局限性。目的/目标/研究问题/研究焦点:本文以五所高校10名黑人和棕色人种残疾本科生的反叙事为中心,运用批判种族理论(CRT)、残疾批判种族理论(DisCrit)和种族主义本土主义,构建了种族主义残疾主义的概念框架。种族主义的残疾歧视将CRT、DisCrit和种族主义本土主义连接起来,描述了在种族主义态度和信仰的指导下,特定形式的残疾歧视如何基于实际或感知到的(或相反,缺乏感知的)残疾/能力来压迫和非人化黑人和棕色人种,从而加强了白人和能力之间的关系。研究设计:我研究了10名黑人和棕色人种本科生的反叙事,他们认为或有残疾/能力的生活经历。反叙事让我可以把学生的故事放在中心。我确定了三个主要的发现:(1)黑人和棕色人种的残疾学生对智力、生产力和学术能力的看法是种族化的;(2)黑人和棕色人种的残疾学生被病态化为懒惰和/或越轨,从而最小化或抹杀了他们的接触需求;(3)黑人和棕色人种的残疾学生抵制种族主义的残疾主义言论。结论/建议:学生的反叙述揭示了种族化的能力观念如何塑造了他们与员工互动的经历,以及他们获得住宿等机构支持的能力。他们还揭示了黑人和棕色人种学生的关键种族残疾认识论,这些学生认为自己或被贴上残疾/残疾的标签。他们的反叙述强调需要:(1)解释种族主义和残疾主义相互关联的交叉框架,以及(2)考虑其多维身份的种族意识政策和实践。
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