Publication | Closed Access
Claiming Space: Aboriginal Students within School Landscapes
54
Citations
24
References
2006
Year
Historical GeographyCritical Race TheoryRace RelationEducationIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementRacial StudySchool GeographiesSocial SciencesIndigenous StudyRaceContemporary RacismCultural DiversityCommunity GeographyEthnic StudiesCultural GeographyAboriginal StudentsMulticulturalismCultureIndigenous Knowledge SystemsIndigenous StudiesEthnographyAnthropologyCultural AnthropologySocial Justice
Abstract There is an emerging body of theoretical, historical and design research that examines the ways in which race and cultural identity are understood to be produced and represented in the landscape. Yet, there remains a dearth of research examining both the historic and contemporary effects of race upon the development of school geographies. This paper has two broad purposes. It highlights the experiential aspects of racialized geographies within schools and, at the same time, it grapples with the processes that maintain or challenge the spatial conditions for the construction of whiteness. Drawing upon in-depth case study research this paper highlights the experiences of Aboriginal students and staff at four different schools, with a particular focus on cross-cultural schools, in Manitoba, Canada. What is needed is a concept of landscape that helps point the way to those interventions that can bring about much greater social justice. And what landscape study needs even more is a concept of landscape that will assist the development of the very idea of social justice. (Henderson, 2003, p. 196)
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