肩负学校废除种族隔离的重任:黑人家庭的压力和健康影响

IF 1.8 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Linnea Evans , Sienna Ruiz , Akilah Collins-Anderson , Darrell Hudson , Odis Johnson Jr. , Erin Linnenbringer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

许多美国黑人学生和他们的家庭为了寻求高质量的教育机会,通过择校或学校废除种族隔离倡议,到远离居住地的学校就读,这是择校计划的主要推动力。利用对黑人学生参与者(n = 22)的看护人的深度访谈和调查得出的数据,这些学生参加了美国为数不多的几个学校废除种族隔离项目之一,我们描述了废除种族隔离的家庭日常经历,包括感知到的收益和成本,特别是对健康的影响。研究结果强调,在通过教育寻求社会流动性的黑人家庭中,额外的牺牲和劳动与健康状况的恶化有关。此外,超过一半的看护人在孩童时期就参与了圣路易斯的废除种族隔离项目,这促使他们将自己的经历与孩子的经历联系起来进行反思。从这一比较中,我们发现黑人家庭施加的剩余劳动力在一代人中重复参与学校的废除种族隔离——我们称之为“种族平等劳动和代际压力的制度化”的证据。然而,在参与者的叙述中,潜在的健康损失往往被最小化。在讨论这些发现时,我们考虑了最小化是如何在逆境中进行的,以及对教育健康研究的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Shouldering the labor of school desegregation: Stress and health implications for Black families
Many U.S. Black students and their families seek quality educational opportunities by enrolling in schools far from their residence via school choice or school desegregation initiatives, a primary impetus to school choice programs. Using data drawn from in-depth interviews and surveys with caregivers of Black student participants (n = 22) who attended one of the few remaining U.S. school desegregation programs, we characterize families' day-to-day experiences with desegregation, including perceived benefits and costs, particularly to health. Study findings highlight added sacrifice and labor relevant to the erosion of health in Black families who seek social mobility through education. Additionally, over half of caregivers participated as children themselves in the St. Louis desegregation program, prompting reflections on their own experiences in relation to their children's experience. From this comparison, we find repetition in the surplus labor exerted by Black families to participate in school desegregation across a generation – evidence we are referring to as the ‘institutionalization of racialized equity labor and intergenerational stress.’ However, the potential health toll was often minimized in participant narratives. In discussing these findings, we consider how minimization is deployed to carry-on through adversity and the implications for education-health research.
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CiteScore
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