No Dreadlocks Allowed: Race, Hairstyles, and Exclusion in Schools

IF 0.5 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
P. Banks
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

While the educational exclusion of students who wear hairstyles linked to people of African descent has garnered significant media attention, there has been little scholarly investigation of this phenomenon. Drawing on content analysis of dress codes in Texas public schools, this article addresses this gap in knowledge by conceptually and empirically elaborating how students who wear dreadlocks are stigmatized in schools. Engaging sociological theory asserting that stigmatization entails unfair treatment and negative labeling, I show how students who wear dreadlocks in some schools are subject to structural discrimination and stereotyping. More specifically, I develop a typology of negative stereotyping and negative treatment faced by students who wear dreadlocks in some schools. By elaborating how students who wear dreadlocks are stigmatized, this article advances theory on culture and inequality in schools. Practically, given growing efforts across the United States to pass legislation that makes school prohibitions on hairstyles linked to people of African descent illegal, it is especially important to understand how these hair bans stigmatize students.
不准留脏辫:种族、发型和学校排斥
虽然对留着与非洲人后裔有关的发型的学生的教育排斥引起了媒体的极大关注,但对这一现象的学术调查却很少。通过对德克萨斯州公立学校着装规范的内容分析,本文从概念上和经验上阐述了留脏辫的学生如何在学校受到歧视,从而解决了这一知识差距。根据社会学理论,污名化意味着不公平待遇和负面标签,我展示了一些学校里留脏辫的学生是如何受到结构性歧视和刻板印象的。更具体地说,我对一些学校里留脏辫的学生所面临的负面刻板印象和负面对待进行了分类。通过阐述留脏辫的学生是如何被污名化的,本文提出了关于学校文化和不平等的理论。实际上,鉴于美国各地越来越多地努力通过立法,使学校禁止与非洲人后裔有关的发型成为非法行为,了解这些发型禁令是如何使学生蒙受耻辱的,这一点尤为重要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
15
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