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First page of Thinking Intersectionally in Education

Educational researchers first noted the need for intersectional theories and intersectionally informed methodologies to address issues of oppression and inequality during the 1980s, but lacked a common language for discussing these concerns (Grant & Sleeter, 1986; McCarthy & Apple, 1988; Sleeter & Grant, 1988). Black feminist theorists (Hill Collins, 1990, 2000; hooks, 1981), Critical Race Theorists (Crenshaw, 1989, 1991), and sociologists (Anthias & Yuval-Davis, 1983) can be credited with the development of a range of intersectionality theories and notions that sought to understand the workings of identity and oppression across a wide range of contexts. Within the past decade, a growing number of education scholars draw on intersectionality to analyze social justice issues in education such as individual experiences and counter-narratives of oppression (Connor, 2006; Staunaes, 2003), groups experiencing intersectional oppression (Gillborn, 2010; Noguera, 2008; Villenas, 2001), and exclusionary policies (Cassidy & Jackson, 2005; Chapman, Lamborn & Epps, 2010; Ravnbol, 2009).

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