“这是一种氛围”:归属、治疗和解放在社区空间由我们和为我们

IF 2.7 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Shaneé A. Washington, Kayla Mendoza Chui, Jessica I. Ramirez, Kaleb Germinaro
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Despite community outcry/pushback, Nurturing Roots has been displaced from their 1/4-acre urban farm located in South Seattle due to predatory landlords. They have since cultivated a temporary plot in Woodinville, Washington, and continue to host their community farming program throughout the community.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Washington Education Association [Grant Office ID: A149257].Notes on contributorsShaneé A. WashingtonShaneé A. Washington (she/her), PhD, is an assistant professor of Justice and Equity in Teacher Education at the University of Washington. Her research and teaching explore Indigenous and Black communities’ self-determining efforts towards more equitable, humanizing, and culturally sustaining educational experiences for their children. Her commitments to centering Black and Indigenous self-determination in education derive from her own experiences as a Black woman, mother, and former middle school teacher of multiply-marginalized students.Kayla Mendoza ChuiKayla Mendoza Chui (she/her), PhD, is a community liaison for the Education, Communities, and Organizations undergraduate major at the University of Washington. She is a second-generation Asian American immigrant who grew up on Ramaytush Ohlone lands. Her work is centered on Asian Critical Race Theory and cultivating culturally sustaining learning spaces by learning with and from anti-imperialist and abolitionist Asian organizers.Jessica I. RamirezJessica I. Ramirez (she/her), PhD, is an assistant professor in Social Work and Chicanx and Latinx studies at Portland State University. She is a first-generation Xicana college graduate and mother from Oxnard, California. Jessica’s research aims to highlight culturally sustaining mental health practices and approaches for Black, Brown, and Indigenous Youth.Kaleb GerminaroKaleb Germinaro (he/him), PhD, is an assistant professor of Critical Pedagogies & Urban Education at the University of Illinois, Chicago. He received his PhD in Learning Sciences & Human Development from the University of Washington. His experiences have solidified his approach to disability, spatial, and environmental justice through designing and implementing learning environments. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要通过“氛围”和废奴主义教学的概念框架,我们的研究探索了黑人和其他全球多数人(PGM)的自我决定工作,他们策划了“由我们,为我们”(BUFU)的归属感,治愈和解放的社区空间。我们询问了PGM社区成员在哪里寻求庇护,以及在春夏两季病毒和暴力袭击以及黑人和其他PGM不成比例死亡的情况下,BUFU空间的治疗和废奴工作是什么样的。通过与两个黑人领导的组织、社区调查和访谈的接触,我们确定了这些社区空间的三个相互关联的主题。首先,这些空间通过食物、音乐、艺术品和经常光顾的PGM人培养出了灵魂的共鸣。其次,它们提供了治愈的氛围,让参与者能够吐气,从白人至上主义和监视中找到庇护。最后,这些空间体现了知识共享、自由梦想和呼吁集体行动的废奴主义氛围。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。在本文中,我们使用“全球多数人”(People of the Global Majority,简称PGM)作为一个更精确的术语来代表我们所研究的人和社区空间,并将“白人”作为常态去中心化,将“有色人种”(POC)和“黑人、土著、有色人种”(BIPOC)等默认术语作为常态。定居者殖民主义是一种结构,而不仅仅是一个事件,在这种结构中,定居者(主要是白人)殖民者入侵、定居,并声称对土著家园(不属于他们自己的土地)拥有所有权(Tuck & Yang, Citation2014;沃尔夫,Citation2006)。获得土地以建立帝国是最终的追求,通过土著的抹去或消灭获得,并通过被视为动产的窃取,进口,强迫劳动来维持(Patel, Citation2021;Tuck & Yang, Citation2014;沃尔夫Citation2006)。3。2019冠状病毒病大流行对黑人社区的不成比例的影响以及持续的反黑人种族主义遗产促使我们决定在本研究中以黑人组织和社区成员为中心,同时也向其他PGM社区成员及其选择的社区空间表示敬意,这些社区成员已经(并将继续)为我们这些全球多数人提供庇护、种族治愈和生计。尽管社区的强烈抗议/反对,由于掠夺性的房东,养育根已经从他们位于西雅图南部的1/4英亩的城市农场搬走了。此后,他们在华盛顿州的伍德因维尔种植了一块临时土地,并继续在整个社区举办他们的社区农业项目。本研究由华盛顿教育协会(Washington Education Association)资助[Grant Office ID: A149257]。作者简介shane e A. Washington(她/她),博士,华盛顿大学教师教育公正与公平助理教授。她的研究和教学探索土著和黑人社区的自我决定的努力,为他们的孩子更公平,人性化,和文化上可持续的教育经验。她致力于将黑人和土著人民的自决置于教育的中心,这源于她自己作为一名黑人妇女、母亲和被多重边缘化学生的前中学教师的经历。Kayla Mendoza Chui(她/她),博士,是华盛顿大学教育、社区和组织本科专业的社区联络员。她是在Ramaytush Ohlone土地上长大的第二代亚裔美国移民。她的工作以亚洲批判种族理论为中心,通过与反帝国主义和废奴主义的亚洲组织者学习和学习,培养文化上可持续的学习空间。Jessica I. Ramirez(她/她),博士,波特兰州立大学社会工作、墨西哥裔和拉丁裔研究助理教授。她是西卡那大学的第一代毕业生,也是加州奥克斯纳德的母亲。杰西卡的研究旨在强调黑人、棕色人种和土著青年在文化上可持续的心理健康实践和方法。Kaleb Germinaro(他/他),博士,芝加哥伊利诺伊大学批判教育学与城市教育助理教授。他在华盛顿大学获得学习科学与人类发展博士学位。通过设计和实施学习环境,他的经历巩固了他对残疾、空间和环境正义的态度。他关注空间,残疾和黑人如何在空间中得到支持和/或压制,以及通过空间定向实现解放的途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“It’s a Vibe”: Belonging, Healing, and Liberation in Community Spaces By Us and For Us
ABSTRACTThrough conceptual framing of “a vibe” and abolitionist teaching, our study explored the self-determining work of Black and other People of the Global Majority (PGM) who have curated “by us, for us” (BUFU) community spaces of belonging, healing, and liberation. We asked where PGM community members were finding refuge and what healing and abolition-centered work looked like in BUFU spaces during a spring and summer of viral and violent attacks and disproportionate deaths of Black folks and other PGM. Through engagement with two Black-led organizations, a community survey, and interviews, we identified three interrelated themes that characterized these community spaces. First, the spaces had soulful vibes cultivated through food, music, artwork, and the PGM folks who frequented them. Second, they offered healing vibes that allowed participants to exhale and find refuge from white supremacy and surveillance. Lastly, they were spaces that embodied abolitionist vibes evident in knowledge sharing, freedom dreaming, and calls for collective action. Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. We use People of the Global Majority or PGM throughout this article as a more precise term to represent the people and community spaces that we studied and to decenter whiteness as normal and the default to terms like People of Color (POC) and Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC).2. Settler colonialism is a structure, not just an event, in which settler (mainly white) colonizers invade, settle, and claim ownership over Indigenous homelands, lands that are not their own (Tuck & Yang, Citation2014; Wolfe, Citation2006). Acquiring land to build empire is the ultimate pursuit, acquired through Indigenous erasure or elimination and maintained through stolen, imported, forced labor deemed as chattel (Patel, Citation2021; Tuck & Yang, Citation2014; Wolfe, Citation2006).3. The disproportionate effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in Black communities and the ongoing legacies of anti-Black racism contributed to our decision to center Black organizations and community members in this research while also paying homage to other PGM community members and their chosen community spaces that have provided (and continue to provide) refuge, racial healing, and sustenance for us Folks of the Global Majority.4. Despite community outcry/pushback, Nurturing Roots has been displaced from their 1/4-acre urban farm located in South Seattle due to predatory landlords. They have since cultivated a temporary plot in Woodinville, Washington, and continue to host their community farming program throughout the community.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Washington Education Association [Grant Office ID: A149257].Notes on contributorsShaneé A. WashingtonShaneé A. Washington (she/her), PhD, is an assistant professor of Justice and Equity in Teacher Education at the University of Washington. Her research and teaching explore Indigenous and Black communities’ self-determining efforts towards more equitable, humanizing, and culturally sustaining educational experiences for their children. Her commitments to centering Black and Indigenous self-determination in education derive from her own experiences as a Black woman, mother, and former middle school teacher of multiply-marginalized students.Kayla Mendoza ChuiKayla Mendoza Chui (she/her), PhD, is a community liaison for the Education, Communities, and Organizations undergraduate major at the University of Washington. She is a second-generation Asian American immigrant who grew up on Ramaytush Ohlone lands. Her work is centered on Asian Critical Race Theory and cultivating culturally sustaining learning spaces by learning with and from anti-imperialist and abolitionist Asian organizers.Jessica I. RamirezJessica I. Ramirez (she/her), PhD, is an assistant professor in Social Work and Chicanx and Latinx studies at Portland State University. She is a first-generation Xicana college graduate and mother from Oxnard, California. Jessica’s research aims to highlight culturally sustaining mental health practices and approaches for Black, Brown, and Indigenous Youth.Kaleb GerminaroKaleb Germinaro (he/him), PhD, is an assistant professor of Critical Pedagogies & Urban Education at the University of Illinois, Chicago. He received his PhD in Learning Sciences & Human Development from the University of Washington. His experiences have solidified his approach to disability, spatial, and environmental justice through designing and implementing learning environments. He focuses on space, how disability and Blackness are supported and/or suppressed in spaces, and pathways towards liberation through spatial orientations.
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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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