This study details the political climate and logic priming the termination of Mexican American Studies in elementary and high school programs within the state of Arizona. The author applies conceptual content analysis and intertextuality to decode euphemisms incorporated by opponents of the program. Primary sources by the state’s Attorney General Tom Horne and school board Superintendent of Public Instruction John Huppenthal are examined for rationales used in the elimination of a pedagogically empowering program for Latina/o students within Tucson Unified School District. Repetitive paradoxes in arguments against Mexican American Studies are found to have implic...
Chicanx students have a relatively lower high school graduation rate in the United States than other...
Within the larger political context of the racialization of the immigration debate, discrimination o...
This thesis argues that to understand why bilingual education did not achieve its aims, the program...
This study details the political climate and logic priming the termination of Mexican Ame...
In 2010, Arizona made national headlines when it enacted laws targeting undocumented immigrants, per...
It has been over a year since the president of the school board in the Tucson Unified School Distric...
In the wealth of literature discussing Tucson Unified School District’s (TUSD) Mexican American Stud...
This paper presents selected findings from an ethnographic case study of at a public junior high sch...
A growing body of literature has attempted to explore the ban on Mexican American Studies in Tucson ...
This qualitative comparison case study investigates the beliefs and behaviors of two Arizona princip...
This note examines the political context surrounding the banning of the Mexican American Studies pro...
We used Latina/Latino Critical Race Theory (LatCrit) to re-analyze survey and interview data from ea...
Despite hesitations to consider race in policy processes on the basis that acknowledging racial diff...
abstract: The demographics of Arizona are changing as Hispanics children are passing through their y...
This paper will explore the implications of Arizona 2010 House Bill 2281, a vaguely worded piece of ...
Chicanx students have a relatively lower high school graduation rate in the United States than other...
Within the larger political context of the racialization of the immigration debate, discrimination o...
This thesis argues that to understand why bilingual education did not achieve its aims, the program...
This study details the political climate and logic priming the termination of Mexican Ame...
In 2010, Arizona made national headlines when it enacted laws targeting undocumented immigrants, per...
It has been over a year since the president of the school board in the Tucson Unified School Distric...
In the wealth of literature discussing Tucson Unified School District’s (TUSD) Mexican American Stud...
This paper presents selected findings from an ethnographic case study of at a public junior high sch...
A growing body of literature has attempted to explore the ban on Mexican American Studies in Tucson ...
This qualitative comparison case study investigates the beliefs and behaviors of two Arizona princip...
This note examines the political context surrounding the banning of the Mexican American Studies pro...
We used Latina/Latino Critical Race Theory (LatCrit) to re-analyze survey and interview data from ea...
Despite hesitations to consider race in policy processes on the basis that acknowledging racial diff...
abstract: The demographics of Arizona are changing as Hispanics children are passing through their y...
This paper will explore the implications of Arizona 2010 House Bill 2281, a vaguely worded piece of ...
Chicanx students have a relatively lower high school graduation rate in the United States than other...
Within the larger political context of the racialization of the immigration debate, discrimination o...
This thesis argues that to understand why bilingual education did not achieve its aims, the program...