This article considers the intersection of school closure recommendations in Philadelphia in 2013 with neighborhood race and class demographics and explores how neighborhood stakeholders situated themselves in space in protesting school closures. Quantitative analysis reveals that census tracts where schools were slated for closure had disproportionately lower income and higher representation of African American residents than those tracts without closure recommendations. Qualitative analysis of testimony at public meetings and subsequent interviews with neighborhood stakeholders highlights 3 ways in which stakeholders invoked their spatial positionality on this landscape: (1) by framing school closure as confirmation and perpetuation of past place-based inequities and marginalization, (2) by describing school closure as a burden unequally borne by poor and African-American communities, and (3) by portraying school closure as a harbinger of displacement. The article highlights the ways in which stakeholders rooted schools in place in racialized political economic space, countering the aspatial logics of marketized school reforms.
机构:
Eastern Mennonite Univ, Washington, DC USA
Eastern Mennonite Univ, Washington Community Scholars Ctr, 836 Taylor St NE, Washington, DC 20017 USAEastern Mennonite Univ, Washington, DC USA
机构:
Virginia Tech, Sociol, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA
Virginia Tech, Ctr Peace Studies & Violence Prevent, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USAVirginia Tech, Sociol, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA
Peguero, Anthony A.
Ovink, Sarah M.
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Virginia Tech, Sociol, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USAVirginia Tech, Sociol, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA
Ovink, Sarah M.
Li, Yun Ling
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Virginia Tech, Dept Sociol, 560 McBryde Hall 0137, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USAVirginia Tech, Sociol, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA