Coloniality and Refugee Education in the United States

Jill Koyama, Adnan Turan
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Abstract

In this paper, we demonstrate the ways in which the schooling of refugee youth in the United States reflects ongoing coloniality in education. Drawing on data collected in a case study, conducted between 2013 and 2016, as part of a larger ongoing ethnography of a Southwest United States District school’s response to refugee students, we show how the enactment of policies, pedagogies, and practices within schools reinforce the government’s control over refugee students and their families. In schools, the students are kept out of certain school spaces, marginalized in remedial courses, and denied academic opportunities and integrated support services. Using empirical data, we demonstrate how the restriction of the students’ movement in and around schools is embedded within the larger limitations embedded in coloniality and assimilation. We situate our analysis within the tensions and interactions between coloniality, assimilation, and neoliberalism as articulated in studies within anthropology and sociology, migration studies, critical refugee studies, and cultural studies. We conclude with a call for the decolonization of education and offer a practical starting point in refugee education.
美国的殖民地与难民教育
在本文中,我们展示了美国对难民青少年的学校教育如何反映出教育中持续存在的殖民性。我们利用在2013年至2016年期间进行的一项案例研究中收集的数据,作为正在进行的一项关于美国西南部地区学校对难民学生的回应的大型人种学研究的一部分,展示了学校内政策、教学法和实践的制定如何加强了政府对难民学生及其家庭的控制。在学校中,学生被排除在某些学校空间之外,在补习课程中被边缘化,被剥夺了学术机会和综合支持服务。通过实证数据,我们展示了学生在学校内外的行动限制是如何被嵌入殖民主义和同化的更大限制之中的。我们将自己的分析置于殖民主义、同化和新自由主义之间的紧张关系和相互作用之中,人类学和社会学、移民研究、批判性难民研究和文化研究都阐明了这一点。最后,我们呼吁实现教育的非殖民化,并为难民教育提供了一个切实可行的出发点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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