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  1. Beyond Higher Education as We Know it: Gesturing Towards Decolonial Horizons of Possibility.Sharon Stein - 2018 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 38 (2):143-161.
    This article addresses the conceptual challenges of articulating the ethical–political limits of ‘higher education as we know it’, and the practical challenges of exploring alternative formations of higher education that are unimaginable from within the dominant imaginary of the higher education field. This article responds to the contemporary conjuncture in which possible futures have been significantly narrowed, and yet these possibilities also appear increasingly unsustainable and unethical. It invites scholars of higher education to rethink the epistemological and ontological frames within (...)
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  • Numbers are Just Not Enough: A Critical Analysis of Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Elementary and Middle School Health Textbooks.Sherry L. Deckman, Ellie Fitts Fulmer, Keely Kirby, Katharine Hoover & Abena Subira Mackall - 2018 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 54 (3):285-302.
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  • Settler colonialism and sociological knowledge: insights and directions forward.Erich W. Steinman - 2022 - Theory and Society 51 (1):145-176.
    What can the analytical framework of settler colonialism contribute to sociological theorizing, research, and overall understanding of the social world? This essay argues that settler colonialism, a distinct social formation with common statuses and predictable dynamics, has much to offer towards new sociological insight regarding the United States. In expanding the scholarly models of colonialism applied to the United States, settler colonial analysis suggests that an underlying logic of Indigenous elimination and settler replacement informs a diverse set of contemporary outcomes (...)
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  • The “Native English Speaker” as Indigenous Replacement: California English Learner Classification Policies and Settler Grammar Expressions of Immigrant Nationhood.Funie Hsu - 2020 - Educational Studies 56 (3):233-247.
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  • This Land Was Made for … : (Re)Appearing Black/Brown Female Corporeality, Life, and Death.Esme G. Murdock - 2020 - Hypatia 35 (1):190-203.
    Lands and bodies are often conceptualized as exhaustible objects and property within settler-colonial and neoliberal ideologies. These conceptualizations lead to underdevelopment of understandings of lands and bodies that fall outside of these ascriptions, and also attempt to actively obscure the pervasive ways in which settler colonialism violently reinscribes itself on the North American landscape through the murder and disappearance of Black and Brown women's bodies. In this article, I will argue that the continual murder and disappearance of Black and Brown (...)
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  • Can the Subaltern Nation Speak by Herself in the History Curriculum?Edda Sant - 2017 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 53 (2):105-121.
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