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Research Article

“Mixed nation!” introducing a conceptual framework for the (im)possibilities of racialized belonging among Black mixed-race youth

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Received 26 Jul 2023, Accepted 15 Feb 2024, Published online: 20 Mar 2024
 

ABSTRACT

The authors draw from multiple research projects and their own lived experiences as motherscholars raising Black mixed-race children to inform the development of a conceptual framework to analyze the politics of belonging specific to Black mixed-race youth. Authors draw from John Crowley’s definition of the politics of belonging as “the dirty work of boundary maintenance” (1999, p. 30; Yuval-Davis, 2006) to conceptualize the boundaries in question as a politicized community of belonging in the U.S. context. The authors critique perspectives on belonging that assume sameness or agreement as a space to belong. Instead, they draw insight from Black mixed-race youth who have pushed them to think about diverse spaces as openings for belonging as they explore the central question of this paper: Where do Black mixed-race youth find a sense of belonging?

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1. see The Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies and the organization website: https://criticalmixedracestudies.com/

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