Education Sciences (Oct 2022)

A Sense of Belonging: The People and Counterspaces Latinx Undocu/DACAmented Collegians Use to Persist

  • Stephen Santa-Ramirez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12100691
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 691

Abstract

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Guided by sense of belonging and counterspaces, this critical ethnographic study investigates the people, places, and spaces collegians that are Latinx and undocu/DACAmented use to persist toward graduation amidst an ongoing anti-im/migrant sociopolitical climate. Findings reveal that (a) connections built with peers who share racial backgrounds and have liminal legal statuses, (b) supportive and affirming faculty, (c) access to culturally-based student organizations and academic programs, and (d) campus departments and programs catered to the holistic support of undocu/DACAmented collegians are salient for these students’ sense of belonging in college, though belongingness is not fully attainable in the United States as a result of racist nativism. Recommendations for research and practice are offered for higher education institutional agents at all levels.

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