“All lives matter”: How districts co-opt equity language and maintain the status quo

Authors

  • Tiffanie Lewis-Durham University of North Carolina- Greensboro

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.28.5248

Keywords:

Educational policy, equity, neoliberalism, White innocence

Abstract

The term “equity” is widely used by educational policy makers to describe myriad programs and practices aimed at closing the supposed racial achievement gap. Research about the way equity has been used in these policies typically explores how policy actors with low will and capacity frame and implement their reforms. Few studies, however, explore equity-oriented reforms initiated and supported by policy makers who claim to fervently support educational equity. The purpose of this critical policy analysis was to examine how the rhetoric used by equity-supportive policy actors may have reinforced neoliberal ideas and inadvertently maintained white innocence and color-blind racism. Examining the Community Schools policy in New York City schools, this study found that some equity initiatives are circumscribed by their focus on “all lives”, which can unwittingly reinforce the status quo in schools.

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Author Biography

Tiffanie Lewis-Durham, University of North Carolina- Greensboro

Dr. Lewis-Durham is an assistant professor of Educational Leadership and Cultural Foundations at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro. Her scholarship and activism focus on community engagement, equity-centered educational policies, and the role of race and racism in schools.

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Published

2020-09-28

How to Cite

Lewis-Durham, T. (2020). “All lives matter”: How districts co-opt equity language and maintain the status quo. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 28, 141. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.28.5248

Issue

Section

Articles