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Executive Summary
White Gazes of Black Detroit: Milliken v. Bradley I, Postcolonial Theory, and Persistent Inequalities by Muhammad A. Khalifa, Ty-Ron M. O. Douglas & Terah T. Chambers - 2016To view the full-text for this article you must be signed-in with the appropriate membership. Please review your options below:
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- Muhammad Khalifa
University of Minnesota E-mail Author MUHAMMAD KHALIFA, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development at the University of Minnesota. He has personally worked to address inequities in schools, districts, and various levels of government. His research examines how urban school leaders enact culturally responsive leadership practices. He has recently published in the Teachers College Record, QSE, Urban Review, EAQ, the Journal of Negro Education, and the Journal of School Leadership. He is coeditor of Handbook on Urban Educational Leadership (Rowan & Littlefield), and Becoming Critical: The Emergence of Social Justice Scholars (SUNY Press). In addition to his work using equity audits in urban schools in the U.S., Dr. Khalifa has engaged in school leadership reform in African/Asian countries.
- Ty-Ron Douglas
University of Missouri-Columbia E-mail Author TY-RON M. O. DOUGLAS, Ph.D, is an Assistant Professor in the Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis Department at the University of Missouri-Columbia. His research explores the intersections between identity, community/geopolitical space, and the social and cultural foundations of leadership and education, with an emphasis on Black masculinity/families, spirituality, and community-based pedagogical spaces. Dr. Douglas’ work has appeared in outlets such as The Urban Review, Educational Studies, Teachers College Record, and Race, Ethnicity, and Education.
- Terah Chambers
Michigan State University E-mail Author TERAH VENZANT CHAMBERS is an Associate Professor of K–12 Educational Administration at Michigan State University. Her research interests include post-Brown K–12 education policy and urban education leadership. Specifically, she is interested in the ways within-school segregative policies influence African American students’ academic achievement and school engagement, as well as the price of school success for high-achieving students of color (racial opportunity cost). She has published in journals such as the Journal of Negro Education, Educational Studies, Race Ethnicity and Education, Teachers College Record and the Journal of School Leadership.
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