The history of Mexican American school segregation is complex, often misunderstood, and currently unresolved. The literature suggests that Mexican Americans experienced de facto segregation because it was local custom and never sanctioned at the state level in the American Southwest. However, the same literature suggests that Mexican Americans experienced de jure segregation because school officials implemented various policies that had the intended effect of segregating Mexican Americans. Rubén Donato and Jarrod S. Hanson argue in this article that although Mexican Americans were legally categorized as “White,” the American public did not recognize the category and treated Mexican Americans as socially “colored” in their schools and communities. Second, although there were no state statutes that sanctioned the segregation of Mexican Americans, it was a widespread trend in the American Southwest. Finally, policies and practices historically implemented by school officials and boards of education should retroactively be considered de jure segregation.
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1 June 2012
Research Article|
June 15 2012
Legally White, Socially “Mexican”: The Politics of De Jure and De Facto School Segregation in the American Southwest
Rubén Donato;
Rubén Donato
1
University of Colorado, Boulder
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Jarrod Hanson
Jarrod Hanson
1
University of Colorado, Boulder
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Harvard Educational Review (2012) 82 (2): 202–225.
Citation
Rubén Donato, Jarrod Hanson; Legally White, Socially “Mexican”: The Politics of De Jure and De Facto School Segregation in the American Southwest. Harvard Educational Review 1 June 2012; 82 (2): 202–225. doi: https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.82.2.a562315u72355106
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