Book contents
- A Better Future
- A Better Future
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Encountering Marginalisation
- Part II Deconstructing Marginalisation
- Part III Confronting Marginalisation
- Chapter 14 ‘Now I Constantly Challenge Society by Bringing My Existence Forward’
- Chapter 15 Towards an Emergent Theory of Fallism (and the Fall of the White-Liberal-University in South Africa)
- Chapter 16 Family Sacrifice, Faltering Systems
- Chapter 17 DACAmented
- Chapter 18 Building Ethical Relationships through the Borderless Higher Education for Refugees Project in Dadaab, Kenya
- Chapter 19 The ‘Jungle’ Is Here; The Jungle Is Outside
- Chapter 20 Culture, Gender and Technology
- Index
- References
Chapter 17 - DACAmented
Impossible Realities, Deferred Actions, Delegated Dreams and Stories of Resilience
from Part III - Confronting Marginalisation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 September 2020
- A Better Future
- A Better Future
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Encountering Marginalisation
- Part II Deconstructing Marginalisation
- Part III Confronting Marginalisation
- Chapter 14 ‘Now I Constantly Challenge Society by Bringing My Existence Forward’
- Chapter 15 Towards an Emergent Theory of Fallism (and the Fall of the White-Liberal-University in South Africa)
- Chapter 16 Family Sacrifice, Faltering Systems
- Chapter 17 DACAmented
- Chapter 18 Building Ethical Relationships through the Borderless Higher Education for Refugees Project in Dadaab, Kenya
- Chapter 19 The ‘Jungle’ Is Here; The Jungle Is Outside
- Chapter 20 Culture, Gender and Technology
- Index
- References
Summary
The journey to higher education by undocumented students has been one of legal, financial and informational barriers. Despite ensured equal access to primary and secondary education, federal policies addressing access to post-secondary education are non-existent – a lack of action that has motivated some states to provide additional access and others to erect further barriers. While the implementation of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme in 2012 has attenuated the transition to ‘illegality’ that many undocumented young people experienced after high school graduation, access to post-secondary education remains a challenging endeavour for most undocumented youth. The recent announcement to rescind DACA and the lack of a solution for comprehensively managing immigration further obscure the future of this constituency. Placed at the intersection of contrasting political, economic and social contexts, this chapter explores the experiences of three undocumented immigrant youth in Texas who enter adult transitions at differing levels of educational attainment. This chapter illustrates how policies, school practices and families’ legal structures continue to create conflicting educational experiences of exclusion and belonging for undocumented young people living in the United States.
Keywords
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- Information
- A Better FutureThe Role of Higher Education for Displaced and Marginalised People, pp. 388 - 406Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
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