L
Lindsay Pérez Huber
Researcher at California State University, Long Beach
Publications - 33
Citations - 2157
Lindsay Pérez Huber is an academic researcher from California State University, Long Beach. The author has contributed to research in topics: Critical race theory & Racism. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 30 publications receiving 1831 citations. Previous affiliations of Lindsay Pérez Huber include University of California, Los Angeles & American University.
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Racial microaggressions as a tool for critical race research
TL;DR: In this article, critical race theory is used to explain how everyday forms of racism emerge in the everyday experiences of people of color, and they provide a framework for understanding and analyzing racial microaggressions that demonstrates how everyday racist events are systemically mediated by institutionalized racism.
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Disrupting apartheid of knowledge: testimonio as methodology in Latina/o critical race research in education
TL;DR: This article used a Latina/o critical race theory (LatCrit) framework to disrupt a narrowly defined process of knowledge production in academia, informed by Eurocentric epistemologies and specific ideological beliefs.
Journal Article
Using Latina/o Critical Race Theory (LatCrit) and Racist Nativism to Explore Intersectionality in the Educational Experiences of Undocumented Chicana College Students
TL;DR: Oliverez et al. as mentioned in this paper examined how a racist nativism framework can help understand the experiences of undocumented Chicana college students attending a public research university in California, and found that racist attitudes have manifested in the educational trajectories of the undocumented students.
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Challenging Racist Nativist Framing: Acknowledging the Community Cultural Wealth of Undocumented Chicana College Students to Reframe the Immigration Debate
TL;DR: Perez Huber as discussed by the authors used race testimonios of ten Chicana undergraduate students at a toptier research university to interrogate and challenge the racist nativist framing of undocumented Latina/o immigrants as problematic, burdensome, and "illegal."
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Getting beyond the ‘symptom,’ acknowledging the ‘disease’: theorizing racist nativism
Lindsay Pérez Huber,Corina Benavides Lopez,Maria C. Malagon,Verónica N. Vélez,Daniel G. Solorzano +4 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Latina/o critical race theory (LatCrit) is utilized to theorize further the concept of racist nativism in the current sociopolitical moment, which is marked by significant anti-immigrant sentiment.