Mexican immigrant mothers' experiences with acculturation in distinct community contexts

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Feeney ◽  
Doris I. Cancel-Tirado ◽  
Leslie Richards ◽  
Margaret Manoogian
2021 ◽  
pp. 0013161X2110335
Author(s):  
Nimo M. Abdi

Purpose: This critical phenomenology study examines the experiences of Somali mothers’ involvement with an urban school in London, United Kingdom. Specifically, the study explores Somali mothers’ experiences and responses in navigating the coloniality of gender discourses imbedded in school structure and culture. The research questions that guided the study concerned the gender-based tools that Somali mothers use to navigate the school structure and culture and how school leaders can recognize and tap into parental knowledge and ways of being to serve these communities. Methods: This study is based on the stories of five Somali immigrant mothers. Data collection included focus groups, field memos, site observations, and school archival data. Data were analyzed through hermeneutic interpretation of whole-part-whole. Findings: Somali mothers use three important elements—identity, resistance, and traditions—to respond to coloniality of gender in school as they negotiate tensions between the Somali conception of motherhood and western notions of gender. The findings emphasize the practices rooted in Indigenous Somali culture and gender roles as assets. Implications: This research argues that the matripotent leadership practices of Somali mothers can inform theory, practice, and policy, as these practices offer a more collective and humanizing approach to leadership centered in ideals connected to a non-Western conception of motherhood, gender, and gender dynamics.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Giulia Pastori ◽  
Alessandra Mussi ◽  
Irene Capelli ◽  
Ryanne J. R. M. Francot

1997 ◽  
Vol 45 (9) ◽  
pp. 1315-1323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norah Schwartz ◽  
Sylvia Guendelman ◽  
Paul English

Author(s):  
Katie Scott

In Lilian Cibils dissertation-turned-book, Immigration, Motherhood and Parental Involvement: Narratives of Communal Agency in the Face of Power Asymmetry (2017), the stories of seven Mexican immigrant mothers provide insight into what motherhood looks like outside the mainstream ideology of parental involvement. Using a critical feminist lens, Cibils employs the concept of motherwork as an alternative to a cultural deficit approach for understanding Mexican immigrant motherhood.


2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 1228-1231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin Hernandez-Mekonnen ◽  
Elise K. Duggan ◽  
Leonel Oliveros-Rosen ◽  
Marsha Gerdes ◽  
Stanton Wortham ◽  
...  

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