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A Just Future addresses the precarious future of American higher education and diversity and inclusion initiatives along with it. From a global pandemic to a national reckoning with anti-Blackness, the 2020 historical conjuncture brutally revealed the impact of structural inequalities on historically marginalized communities and galvanized college students, diversity officers, and educators on a scale not seen since the 1960s. In so doing, they exposed the unfinished business of the Civil Rights era and the limits of diversity and inclusion reforms.The time has come to create a more just future for the most marginalized members at higher education institutions. To do so, we must share a common understanding of where we have been, what went wrong, and how to get back on track. Barton draws on abolitionist frameworks of social change to provide a bold, comprehensive guide to abolitionism in education not only for diversity, equity, and inclusion practitioners, but also higher education leaders and faculty. As a result, A Just Future provides new values, tools, and mindsets to address--and redress--ongoing forms of oppression that thrive on college campuses.
"Through an examination of inclusive social legislation, an expansive welfare apparatus, familialist employer policies, and populationist state practices, this book illustrates how reproductive citizenship - that is, gendered, sex-based social rights - served as the foundation for the integration of women, immigrants, and colonial subjects in France before 1945"--
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