跨国界的混乱:从墨西哥穿越混乱的梦想

IF 2.7 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Equity & Excellence in Education Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/10665684.2022.2158399
Sarah Gallo, Anel V. Suriel
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要根据一项针对迁移到墨西哥父母家乡的美国出生儿童的人种学研究,我们采用了跨国界和能力批判种族研究(DisCrit)框架,以了解非文档性和能力塑造跨国界教育体验的复合、非文档化方式。在这篇文章中,我们关注两个家庭的经历,并认为有必要建立一个跨国界的DisCrit框架,以揭示无证父母如何在他们称之为家的国家中,跨越隔阂,为他们有残疾的孩子寻求教育支持,并使他们的未来人性化。研究结果揭示了交叉形式的无文档性,或被排除在获取和归属的文件之外,如何限制家庭跨越地缘政治边界、学校教育和医疗机构的流动,以及获得学习支持所需的有文档的诊断。在其含义中,我们探讨了如果政策、教育和研究的方法以跨境父母的经历、次级知识和人性化梦想为中心,可能会是什么样子。
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Transborder DisCrit: Dreaming Across Disjunctures from Mexico
ABSTRACT Drawing from an ethnographic study with U.S.-born children who had relocated to their parents’ hometowns in Mexico, we engaged transborder and dis/ability critical race studies (DisCrit) frameworks to understand the compounding, deterritorialized ways undocumentedness and dis/ability shape educational experiences across borders. In this article, we focus on the experiences of two familias and argue that a transborder DisCrit framing is necessary to reveal how undocumented parents advocate and dream across disjunctures in search of access to educational supports and humanizing futures for their children with dis/abilities across the countries they call home. Findings reveal how intersecting forms of undocumentedness, or exclusion from papers for access and belonging, constrained families’ access to movement across geopolitical borders, schooling and health-care institutions, and documented diagnoses needed to access learning supports. In the implications, we explore what approaches to policy, education, and research might look like if they centered the experiences, subaltern knowledges, and humanizing dreams of transborder parents.
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来源期刊
Equity & Excellence in Education
Equity & Excellence in Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
23.10%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: Equity & Excellence in Education publishes articles based on scholarly research utilizing qualitative or quantitative methods, as well as essays that describe and assess practical efforts to achieve educational equity and are contextualized within an appropriate literature review. We consider manuscripts on a range of topics related to equity, equality and social justice in K-12 or postsecondary schooling, and that focus upon social justice issues in school systems, individual schools, classrooms, and/or the social justice factors that contribute to inequality in learning for students from diverse social group backgrounds. There have been and will continue to be many social justice efforts to transform educational systems as well as interpersonal interactions at all levels of schooling.
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