Coloniality and Refugee Education in the United States
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Few words map humanity’s evolution more clearly than colonialism.
The promise of assimilation for U.S. nationalism, indeed is the eventual obliteration of the immigrant through “Americanization”. The assimilation problematic, after all, rationalizes a series of mutations through which the alien difference of the immigrant gets incorporated as the ethnic and eventually must become “American”. Thus, the hegemonic immigration discourse that subordinates the immigrant to the assimilationist demands of “Americanization” is the ultimate route through which one or another “native’s point of view” may contribute to the continuous production of an “American” national identity.
It is a fact that, within schools, colleges and universities, disciplining bodies and knowledge (through discourses and practices of regulation, deregulation, competition and standardization) have ensured that what is deemed “education”—and how such education is produced and delivered serves individualized, private, corporate market and industrial capital interests.(p. 42)
1.1. Brief History of Policy and Discourse Associated with Refugee Education
Everyone has the right to education. Education shall be free, at least in the elementary and fundamental stages. Elementary education shall be compulsory. Technical and professional education shall be made generally available and higher education shall be equally accessible to all on the basis of merit.
Education is a human right and a force for sustainable development and peace. Every goal in the 2030 Agenda requires education to empower people with the knowledge, skills and values to live in dignity, build their lives and contribute to their societies. Today, more than 262 million children and youth are out of school. Six out of ten are not acquiring basic literacy and numeracy after several years in school. 750 million adults are illiterate, fueling poverty and marginalization. Ambitions for education are essentially captured in Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4) of the 2030 Agenda which aims to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” by 2030.
1.2. Literature: Refugees and Schooling in the United States
1.3. Theory: Coloniality’s Impact on Contemporary Refugee Education
…[C]oloniality survives colonialism. It is maintained alive in books, in the criteria for academic performance, in cultural patterns, in common sense, in the self-image of peoples. In aspirations of self, and in so many other aspects of our modern experience. In a way, as modern subjects we breath coloniality all the time and everyday.(p. 243)
In general terms, the colonizing project was seen as being in the interests of the good of, and as promoting the welfare of the colonized notions that draw our attention to the existence of a colonialist care discourse whose terms have some resonance with those of some contemporary strands of the ethic of care. Particular colonial practices were seen as concrete attempts to achieve these paternalistic ends. Coercive religious conversion was seen as promoting the spiritual welfare of the “heathen”. Inducting the colonized into the economic infrastructures of colonialism was seen as conferring the material benefits of western science, technology and economic progress, the cultural benefits of western education, and the moral benefits of the work ethic.(pp. 133–34)
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results: Restricting Movement, Limiting Access to Knowledge, and Denying the Construction of Cultural Knowledge
3.1. Limited Movement in Schools
Oh. Uhm. I don’t know. [Pointing down a hall], it can be there. I don’t go there … It can be there. Those classes are [pointing in the same direction again] there. The American students are there. The smart ones. We don’t go there.
We had a kid from Iraq get lost last year, or sorta lost. He had gone into the wrong hallway and ended up where we keep all of the off-season sports equipment that we weren’t using … No one was really going down there since it was tennis season so that kid was there for hours, wandering around. Sadly, his [SEI] teacher didn’t realize that he was missing for hours and by the time she reported him, we had to call the police…
3.2. Structured English Immersion (SEI)
I worry that these kids come from the world. They’ve been in several countries and speak parts of all kinds of languages. Their worlds have been hard and dangerous, but they have also been expansive in a weird way …. Now, their lives are not scary or dangerous in the same ways, but they are narrowed, small even…I want to offer them more experiences, but I am bound by policy and time.
Well, they need to speak and write English if they live here. They came here because they wanted to be American …. Being, part of being American is speaking English. I’m not saying I like that, but it is what it is.
3.3. Afterschool and Summer Tutoring
Why do these children spend all day together studying English and nothing more? Why do you not see them as important? … How can you explain this that their children (waved his arm around the auditorium) are worth it and ours are not?
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Decolonial movements tend to approach ideas and change in a way that do not isolate knowledge from action. They combine knowledge, practice, and creative expressions, among other areas in their efforts to change the world. For them, colonization and dehumanization demand a holistic movement that involves reaching out to others, communicating, and organizing.(p. 7)
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | While there are few studies conducted in the US, there is a larger body of literature on refugee education in Europe. For reviews, see de Wal Pastoor (2016) and Morrice (2021). |
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Koyama, J.; Turan, A. Coloniality and Refugee Education in the United States. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 314. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060314
Koyama J, Turan A. Coloniality and Refugee Education in the United States. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(6):314. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060314
Chicago/Turabian StyleKoyama, Jill, and Adnan Turan. 2024. "Coloniality and Refugee Education in the United States" Social Sciences 13, no. 6: 314. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060314
APA StyleKoyama, J., & Turan, A. (2024). Coloniality and Refugee Education in the United States. Social Sciences, 13(6), 314. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060314