Desegregation is Not a Black and White Issue: Latino Advocacy for Equal Schooling before and after Brown

IF 0.4 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
LORRIN THOMAS
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article argues for the importance of reframing the history of school desegregation in the United States beyond Black and white and beyond the regional frames through which this history has been interpreted. In Western states, most Latino children attended schools segregated not by law but by custom starting in the early twentieth century; Latino students also encountered de facto segregation in the Eastern and Midwestern cities with large Puerto Rican populations by the 1950s. Parents, students, advocates, and activists protested the inequality of educational outcomes for Latino children over many decades, developing distinctive strategies to address the combination of racial and language-based discrimination faced by Latino students. Yet, because they were marginalized in political debates in the 1960s and 1970s and because most national-level historical scholarship on school desegregation focuses on Black and white participants, Latinos’ role in this aspect of our national civil rights history has remained obscured.

取消种族隔离不是一个非黑即白的问题:布朗案前后拉丁裔对平等入学的倡导
本文认为,重构美国学校废除种族隔离历史的重要性超越了黑人和白人,也超越了解释这段历史的地区框架。在西部各州,从20世纪初开始,大多数拉丁裔儿童就读的学校并非因法律而是因习俗而被隔离;到20世纪50年代,拉丁裔学生在拥有大量波多黎各人的东部和中西部城市也遭遇了事实上的种族隔离。几十年来,家长、学生、倡导者和活动家抗议拉丁裔儿童教育成果的不平等,并制定了独特的策略来解决拉丁裔学生面临的种族和语言歧视问题。然而,由于他们在20世纪60年代和70年代的政治辩论中被边缘化,而且大多数关于学校废除种族隔离的国家级历史研究都集中在黑人和白人参与者身上,拉美裔人在我们国家民权历史这方面的作用仍然模糊不清。
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CiteScore
0.50
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