Hitting the white ceiling: Structural racism and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander university graduates
This article reports on a study that explored what it means to be a mature-age Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander university graduate in the context of age, life-stage, history, culture, socioeconomic status, race and place. Using narrative interview data and fieldwork observation, we focus on th...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of sociology (Melbourne, Vic.) Vic.), 2020-09, Vol.56 (3), p.487-504, Article 1440783319859656 |
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description | This article reports on a study that explored what it means to be a mature-age Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander university graduate in the context of age, life-stage, history, culture, socioeconomic status, race and place. Using narrative interview data and fieldwork observation, we focus on the graduates' workplace experiences and take a case study approach to amplify their voices. We argue that the data challenges the ideological construct of Australia as a 'postracial' society and illustrates how interrelated variants of structural racism function to sanction, silence and control educated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, divide communities into quasi-hierarchies, and sustain white power and privilege. We show how these variants are expressed as low expectations, shadeism, culturism and privilege protectionism, and argue that their enactment can erect an invisible barrier to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander professional progression: a 'white ceiling' above which many graduates struggle to ascend. |
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subjects | Aboriginal Australians Australasian cultural groups Case studies College graduates Education Enactment Indigenous peoples Native peoples Protectionism Race Racism Racism in the workplace Social privilege Social Sciences Socioeconomic status Sociology Systemic racism Torres Strait Islanders Variants Workplaces |
title | Hitting the white ceiling: Structural racism and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander university graduates |
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