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Brown, Not White: School Integration and the Chicano Movement in Houston
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Bibliographic Detail
Publisher Texas A & M Univ Pr
Publication date April 1, 2001
Pages 283
Binding Hardcover
Book category Adult Non-Fiction
ISBN-13 9781585441150
ISBN-10 1585441155
Dimensions 1 by 6.75 by 9.75 in.
Weight 1.45 lbs.
Availability§ Out of Print
Original list price $34.95
Other format details university press
§As reported by publisher
Summaries and Reviews
Amazon.com description: Product Description:
Strikes, boycotts, rallies, negotiations, and litigation marked the efforts of Mexican-origin community members to achieve educational opportunity and oppose discrimination in Houston schools in the early 1970s. These responses were sparked by the effort of the Houston Independent School District to circumvent a court order for desegregation by classifying Mexican American children as "white" and integrating them with African American children—leaving Anglos in segregated schools. Gaining legal recognition for Mexican Americans as a minority group became the only means for fighting this kind of discrimination.

The struggle for legal recognition not only reflected an upsurge in organizing within the community but also generated a shift in consciousness and identity. In Brown, Not White Guadalupe San Miguel, Jr., astutely traces the evolution of the community's political activism in education during the Chicano Movement era of the early 1970s.

San Miguel also identifies the important implications of this struggle for Mexican Americans and for public education. First, he demonstrates, the political mobilization in Houston underscored the emergence of a new type of grassroots ethnic leadership committed to community empowerment and to inclusiveness of diverse ideological interests within the minority community. Second, it signaled a shift in the activist community's identity from the assimilationist "Mexican American Generation" to the rising Chicano Movement with its "nationalist" ideology. Finally, it introduced Mexican American interests into educational policy making in general and into the national desegregation struggles in particular.

This important study will engage those interested in public school policy, as well as scholars of Mexican American history and the history of desegregation in America.



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Hardcover
Book cover for 9781585441150
 
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from Texas A & M Univ Pr (April 1, 2001)
9781585441150 | details & prices | 283 pages | 6.75 × 9.75 × 1.00 in. | 1.45 lbs | List price $34.95
About: Strikes, boycotts, rallies, negotiations, and litigation marked the efforts of Mexican-origin community members to achieve educational opportunity and oppose discrimination in Houston schools in the early 1970s.

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