Drawing from an ethnography with mixed-status families residing in Mexico, we examine what we term transborder literacies of (in)visibility, or diasporic people\u27s innovative interactions around texts that prepare them to move across incompatible mononational institutions divided by borders. Through close attention to the literacy practices families engaged in as they applied for their children\u27s U.S. passports from Mexico, we demonstrate how these literacies were not just about expanding authentic ways of reading and writing to include both U.S. and Mexican ways, but instead required unique transborder literacies across mutually unintelligible, racializing mononational systems so that children could (re)access their rights on both sid...
In this paper the authors draw on a larger project related to diasporic identification in order to e...
This article reports from instances of child language brokering among emergent bilingual youths and ...
This article examines instances of a U.S.–Mexican transnational youth honing his critical translingu...
textTransnational Mexican-origin Families is a qualitative study of four working class, Mexican-orig...
Abstract This thesis examines literacy practices embedded in the home domain of three transnationa...
This ten-month ethnographic study examines how four Latina immigrant mothers and their young childre...
This dissertation research interprets the results of a multiple case study focused on the everyday l...
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...
In education today, Latino populations are growing, but Telles and Ortiz (2013) claim they account f...
Reframing immigrant families as transnationals, this article highlights transnational families’ ways...
This ethnographic study explores the contradictory literacy practices of 10 high school students of ...
This thesis explores transborderism and its practices at the Cali-Baja region through the perspectiv...
Situated in a recently established Mexican immigrant community in Pennsylvania, this dissertation in...
In an increasingly mobile world, be it virtual or material, we have an incredible opportunity to con...
Studies indicate that Latina/o immigrant youth engage in a wide range of sophisticated literacy prac...
In this paper the authors draw on a larger project related to diasporic identification in order to e...
This article reports from instances of child language brokering among emergent bilingual youths and ...
This article examines instances of a U.S.–Mexican transnational youth honing his critical translingu...
textTransnational Mexican-origin Families is a qualitative study of four working class, Mexican-orig...
Abstract This thesis examines literacy practices embedded in the home domain of three transnationa...
This ten-month ethnographic study examines how four Latina immigrant mothers and their young childre...
This dissertation research interprets the results of a multiple case study focused on the everyday l...
This twenty-three month ethnographic study seeks to understand how citizenship status impacts the ev...
In education today, Latino populations are growing, but Telles and Ortiz (2013) claim they account f...
Reframing immigrant families as transnationals, this article highlights transnational families’ ways...
This ethnographic study explores the contradictory literacy practices of 10 high school students of ...
This thesis explores transborderism and its practices at the Cali-Baja region through the perspectiv...
Situated in a recently established Mexican immigrant community in Pennsylvania, this dissertation in...
In an increasingly mobile world, be it virtual or material, we have an incredible opportunity to con...
Studies indicate that Latina/o immigrant youth engage in a wide range of sophisticated literacy prac...
In this paper the authors draw on a larger project related to diasporic identification in order to e...
This article reports from instances of child language brokering among emergent bilingual youths and ...
This article examines instances of a U.S.–Mexican transnational youth honing his critical translingu...