Latinx
Articles in this section may concurrently be sorted into other fields of study (e.g., Higher Education, Social Sciences). Population tabs were created for this project to highlight the impact of racial discrimination on particular racial/ethnic groups. Sentences that come directly from the article are in quotation marks. CSUN students, faculty, and staff can access most articles through the University Library using CSUN credentials. Please use the library鈥檚 interlibrary loan services if an article of interest is not available.
Alem谩n, S. M., & Alem谩n, E., Jr. (2016).听.听Urban Education, 51(3), 287鈥314. https://doi.org/10.1177/0042085915626212
- This article 鈥渕aps out two critical race media projects鈥攁 documentary and a Chicana/o-centric student newspaper鈥攄eveloped by Chicana/o scholars seeking to fulfill the promise of praxis hailed by critical race theorists.鈥 Guided by CRT and Latina/Latino Critical Race Theory, these projects 鈥渕erge research and activism in order to cultivate figurative and literal spaces that encourage and allow for the recuperation of memory, archiving forgotten history, and the self-determination of contemporary identities and belonging.鈥
Cu谩draz, G. H. (2005).听.听Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 4(3), 215鈥234. https://doi.org/10.1177/1538192705276547
- This article discusses 鈥渒ey studies and significant events related to the field of Chicanas and higher education for three decades, beginning with the 1970s and ending with the 1990s.鈥
Delgado Bernal, D. (2002).听.听Qualitative Inquiry, 8(1), 105鈥126. https://doi.org/10.1177/107780040200800107
- Guided by CRT and Latina/Latino critical theory, the author 鈥渃ompares and contrasts the experiences of Chicana/Chicano students through a Eurocentric and a critical raced-gendered epistemological perspective and demonstrates that each perspective holds vastly different views of what counts as knowledge, specifically regarding language, culture, and commitment to communities.鈥
Feize, L., Longoria, D. A., & Fernandez, A. (2019).听.听Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 1鈥19. https://doi.org/10.1177/1538192719841531
- Guided by Latina/Latino Critical Race Theory and Culturally Responsive Pedagogy, this study explores Mexican American cultural elements through folklore as a way of addressing cultural competence. 鈥淐ontent analysis of 21 stories, which were collected from Mexican American older adults, indicated that strong family ties, gender roles, and religiosity are central cultural elements in Mexican American culture.鈥
Garc铆a, D. G. (2006). Remembering Chavez Ravine: Culture clash and critical race theater.听Chicana/o-Latina/o Law Review, 26, 111鈥130.
- Garc铆a defines a critical race theater as 鈥減erformance art that illuminates the lives and histories of marginalized communities while challenging social and racial injustice.鈥 This paper analyzes 鈥渁 critical race theater account of the historical events that took place during the removal of almost 3,800 people from three predominately Mexican American neighborhoods in 1950s Los Angeles.鈥
Garcia, N. M., & Mireles-Rios, R. (2020).听.听American Educational Research Journal, 57(5), 2059鈥2088. https://doi.org/10.3102/0002831219892004
- Using pl谩ticas, the sharing of cultural teachings through intimate and informal conversations, the authors analyze their personal college choice processes as Chicanas by examining the impact of being raised by Chicano college-educated fathers. Drawing on two theoretical frameworks, college-conocimiento, a Latinx college choice conceptual framework, and critical raced-gendered epistemologies, they demonstrate how intimate and informal conversations occur within their own Chicana/o daughter-father relationships in negotiating higher education and household contexts.
Garc铆a, S. J. (2017)聽.听Sociology Compass, 11(6), Article e12484. https://doi.org/10.1111/soc4.12484
- This article provides an overview of CRT to document the racialized lives of Mexican immigrants and their communities. Garc铆a brings attention to one of the dominant approaches to the study of sociological migration, segmented assimilation theory. In doing so, Garc铆a uses CRT as a framework to bring race and other axes of stratification such as undocumented status to light.
Iglesias, E. M., & Valdes, F. (1998). Religion, gender, sexuality, race and class in coalitional theory: Critical and self-critical analysis of LatCrit social justice agendas.听Chicano-Latino Law Review, 19, 503鈥588.
- The authors first develop a critical account of the role of religion in Latina/Latino Critical Race Theory (LatCrit) practice and legal scholarship. They then take up the question of 鈥渟exualities, otherness and community in LatCrit theory, focusing particularly on the operation of sexual orientation diversities in the construction of LatCrit anti-subordination theory鈥攁s well as mapping out the multiply contested legal sites where the regulation of sexualities is interconnected with the hegemonic privileging of the male-dominated nuclear family.鈥 Lastly, they map out multiple sites where LatCrit aspirations to move beyond all forms of essentialism have revealed new anti-subordination problematics and possibilities.
Jim茅nez-Castellanos, O., Cisneros, J., & G贸mez, L. M. (2013). Applying racist nativism theory to K鈥12 education policy in Arizona, 2000鈥2010.听Aztl谩n: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 38(2), 175鈥190.
- This article uses the concept of racist nativism as an analytic tool to examine education policy in Arizona. Using Arizona as a case study, the authors look at assimilationist practices in education that affect immigrants and citizens of Latinx heritage. They focus on contemporary education policy from 2000 to 2010, particularly language and curricular mandates (Proposition 203, the four-hour English Language Development block model, and HB 2281), to unveil the continuing marginalization of Latinx population in Arizona鈥檚 K鈥12 educational system. They conclude 鈥渂y describing the overarching effects of these policies and their implications for state leaders and policy makers in Arizona and other states.鈥
L贸pez, N., Vargas, E., Juarez, M., Cacari-Stone, L., & Bettez, S. (2018).听.听Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, 4(1), 49鈥66. https://doi.org/10.1177/2332649217708798
- Using the 2015 Latino National Health and Immigration Survey (N = 1,197), the authors examine the relationship between physical and mental health status and three multidimensional measures of race: 鈥(1) street race, or how you believe other 鈥楢mericans鈥 perceive your race at the level of the street; (2) socially assigned race, or what we call ascribed race, which refers to how you believe others usually classify your race in the United States; and (3) self-perceived race, or how you usually self-classify your race on questionnaires.鈥 They find that 鈥渙nly self-perceived race correlates with physical health and that street race is associated with mental health.鈥 They argue that 鈥渟treet race is a promising multidimensional measure of race for exploring inequality among Latinxs.鈥
N煤帽ez, A. J., & Mer谩z Garc铆a, M. (2017).听.听SAGE Open, 7(4). https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244017744595
- This study uses empirical data from a version of the Clark doll experiment and Latina/Latino Critical Race Theory to determine the factors that shape the perceptions of college among 35 randomly selected Latinx children in Grades 2nd to 5th. Findings show: 鈥(a) that Latinx children hold their race/ethnicity in lower regard when compared to Whites, exhibit an ambivalence regarding identity that negatively affects their self-esteem and their perceptions of college as an attainable goal鈥; and (b) that Latinas perceived themselves more favorably than Latinos in all categories, which positively affects their perceptions of a college education.鈥
Rodriguez, D. (2010).听.听Cultural Studies 鈫 Critical Methodologies, 10(6), 491鈥507. https://doi.org/10.1177/1532708610365481
- The author addresses how storytelling can serve as a means for researchers to create collective transformational spaces, co-constructing knowledge about self and further deepening our understandings about the role of race while in the field.
Sol贸rzano, D. G. (1998).听.听International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 11(1), 121鈥136. https://doi.org/10.1080/095183998236926
- Using CRT as a framework, this article examines how racial and gender microaggressions impact the career trajectories of Chicana and Chicano scholars.
Urquijo-Ruiz, R. E. (2004). Alicia Sotero V谩squez: Police brutality against an undocumented Mexican woman.听Chicana/Latina Studies: The Journal of Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social, 4(1), 62鈥84.
- This article discusses police brutality and human rights violations in the U.S. The author examines the infamous Riverside Sheriff鈥檚 brutal beating of an undocumented Mexican woman as exemplary of a particular historical relationship between Mexican labor, the U.S. nation-state, and the material conditions of immigrant laborers.
Yosso, T. J. & Garc铆a, D. G. (2007). 鈥淭his is no slum!鈥: A critical race theory analysis of community cultural wealth in Culture Clash鈥檚 Chavez Ravine.听Aztl谩n: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 32(1), 145鈥179.
- Drawing on a CRT framework, this article 鈥渨eaves together sociology, education, history, and performance studies to challenge deficit interpretations of Pierre Bourdieu's cultural capital theory and to analyze Culture Clash's play Chavez Ravine.鈥 The play recounts 鈥渁 decade of Los Angeles history through the perspectives of displaced Mexican American families from three former neighborhoods of Chavez Ravine. Culture Clash's performance recovers and personifies the community cultural wealth cultivated by these families.鈥