The Pros And Cons Of Marginalization And Oppression Of Indigenous People

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The Marginalization and Oppression of Indigenous People Continues Education has been often cited as a critical factor in the development of many people and has become recognized as a pivotal point for getting informed about the inequalities suffered by people that are at a disadvantaged. Indigenous people in Mexico have been at the forefront of many inequalities and disadvantages that seem to have continued to the present time. This community’s disadvantages date back to the Spanish Conquest. Even today, the effects of the Spanish colonialization are seen through the marginalization and oppression of many indigenous people in society. In the article, “Parents reeling over the closure of indigenous charter high school”, in which an indigenous …show more content…

To this day, the indigenous people in Mexico are the poorest and most politically disenfranchised as many Latinos still view “whiteness” or being “Spanish” as the highest social status (Romero, Lecture 4: Spanish Colonialism, 2017). This way of racial legacy theory thinking happened because during the colonization of the indigenous people there were writers such as Juan Gines de Sepulveda accentuated indigenous people as “barbarous and impious and inhuman” and stated that they had no rights making them natural slavery (Sepulveda, 1547). This way of thinking was emphasized by the creation of the doctrine El Requerimiento. In this doctrine, indigenous people were forced to be submissive, obeying every single order of the Spaniards if they went against these “rules” the Spaniards had the authority and right to enter their lands any means necessary (Requerimiento, 1514). In the article, the teachers of the charter school stated that the Los Angeles Unified School District’s decision to shut down is the school is about the lack of funding, but because the school has stood up to the district. The indigenous people are forced to be submissive to …show more content…

Richard Delgado defined the critical race theory as the study of questioning race, racism, and power. It looks in depth at the questions that arise about the “foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law”, while considering many of the same issues that conventional civil rights and ethnic studies do (Delgado & Stefancic, Critical Race Theory: An Introduction, 2001). The critical race theory has central components that can be used to achieve social transformation, which is more of a race-conscious approach, as opposed to the more cautious approach of liberalism, which embraces colorblindness, meritocracy, and neutrality. This kind of liberalism serves to benefit the “white” race and see to it that any person of color does not have the same privileges that whites do (Romero, Lecture 10: Critical Race Theory, 2017). Liberalism’s ideology of equal opportunity does not challenge the current racist structures and institutions. This is the reason the critical race theory critiques liberalism. It is these racist structures and institutions that disregard any institutions and structures that want to promote a conscious of race that gives those at a disadvantage knowledge to

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