Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Helena Lima, Ambrizeth

Title The Socialization of Cabo Verdean Immigrant Youth in Urban America Family, School and Neighborhood Contexts
Published Boston : BRILL, 2022

Copies

Description 1 online resource (144 p.)
Series Anti-Colonial Educational Perspectives for Transformative Change Ser
Anti-Colonial Educational Perspectives for Transformative Change Ser
Contents Preliminary Material / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Copyright page / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Dedication / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Preface / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Acknowledgments / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Introduction / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Chapter 1 Ethnohistorical Frameworks and Theoretical Lenses / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Chapter 2 Broken Families, Broken Hearts / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Chapter 3 Who Showed You Such a Distant Road? / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Chapter 4 Gender, Race and Ethnicity / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Chapter 5 Where Past and Present Intersect / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Chapter 6 Conclusion / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- References / Ambrizeth Helena Lima -- Index / Ambrizeth Helena Lima
Summary At the dawn of the new millennium, immigration means a new beginning for many Cabo Verdean youth who arrive in Boston, Massachusetts. This new generation of Cabo Verdeans, however, faces different sets of challenges-ranging from family separation and reunification, to emerging street violence, to "sweeps" that culminate in deportation. This book chronicles the journey of Cabo Verdean young men as they negotiate their feelings around family, school, and neighborhood contexts. Ambrizeth Helena Lima discusses in depth the factors within these contexts that compel some of the young men to thrive and succeed, and others to spiral into a cycle of violence and eventual deportation. Lima also shows the young men's vulnerability in their urban neighborhoods, as one of them declares that in this journey "you're on your own." The young men in her book discuss their dreams, love for their family and culture, and the struggle to become "American." As with other racialized immigrant youth from places as diverse as the Caribbean and South Asia, these young men face racial, ethnic, and gender stereotypes that are grounded in America's white/black racial rationalization process. Their journey is marked with emotional and psychological upheaval as they strive to find a path that leads to the better life that America promised them
Notes Description based upon print version of record
Subject Emigration and immigration.
Education.
Immigrants.
Education
Emigration and immigration
Immigrants
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9789004466616
9004466614