Coloniality and Refugee Education in the United States

Author:

Koyama Jill1ORCID,Turan Adnan2

Affiliation:

1. Division of Education Leadership and Innovation, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85281, USA

2. MaryLouFulton Teachers College, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85281, USA

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.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference47 articles.

1. Critical transnational curriculum for immigrant and refugee students;Bajaj;Curriculum Inquiry,2020

2. Bajaj, Monisha, Walsh, Daniel, Bartlett, Lesley, and Martínez, Gabriela (2022). Humanizing Education for Immigrant and Refugee Youth: 20 Strategies for the Classroom and Beyond, Teachers College Press.

3. Recognition, Power and Coloniality;Stead;Postcolonial Studies,2017

4. Balibar, Etienne, and Wallerstein, Immanuel Maurice (1991). Race, Nation, Class: Ambiguous Identities, Verso.

5. Baltodano, Marta (2023). Neoliberalism and the demise of public education: The corporatization of schools of education. Neoliberalism and Education, Routledge.

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