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Monday, March 09, 2026

From Walkouts to Takeovers: Texas Escalates Its War on Student Voice, by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

 From Walkouts to Takeovers: Texas Escalates Its War on Student Voice

by

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

March 9, 2026

The recent op-ed by Jasmin Lee, Daniel Dawer, and Cory Brautigam exposes something deeply troubling about the Texas Education Agency’s latest threats against school districts where students have protested immigration enforcement. What is at stake is not merely student discipline or classroom order. What we are witnessing is the attempted expansion of state takeover power into the realm of political speech. I quote: "there are no recorded instances of state education agencies using takeover as a consequence for student activism anywhere in the nation."

Think about that. This is a singular policy agenda unique to Texas.

Historically, state takeovers were justified—however controversially—on grounds such as academic performance or financial mismanagement. But under the new logic advanced by Governor Greg Abbott, Attorney General Ken Paxton, and the Texas Education Agency, student protest itself may now constitute a trigger for state intervention. If this standard holds, students walking out to protest immigration raids, detention of classmates, or broader questions of justice could effectively place their entire school district at risk of state control.

This is a stunning escalation. It transforms the accountability apparatus of the state into a mechanism for disciplining democratic participation.

The irony, of course, is profound. Texas political leaders frequently invoke “free speech” as justification for dismantling diversity initiatives, regulating curriculum, and policing universities. Yet when students exercise that very freedom—especially in defense of immigrant communities—the response is investigation, intimidation, and the threat of takeover.

None of this should surprise us. For decades, state takeover policies have disproportionately targeted Black and Latino communities. The takeover of Houston ISD already revealed how such interventions often produce cultures of fear, censorship, and top-down control rather than meaningful educational improvement. Extending this logic to student protest simply strips away the last remaining pretense that these policies are primarily about academic outcomes.

At its core, this moment reflects not simply an assertion of state power, but an alarming turn toward extremism in Texas education policy. Threatening to take over entire school districts because students engage in protest is wildly out of step with the democratic purposes of public education. Schools are supposed to cultivate civic participation, not punish it. 

Yet Texas leaders are now attempting to police student speech itself—deciding who gets to speak, who gets to organize, and who gets to define the boundaries of democratic participation in our schools. When student protest becomes grounds for state intervention, accountability policy has been transformed—even disfigured—into a tool of political control.

Young people have always been central to movements for justice—from the Chicano walkouts of 1968 to the student protests against gun violence in recent years. To threaten entire school districts because students speak out today is not only historically short-sighted; it is a warning sign about the direction of governance in Texas public education.

If student activism becomes grounds for state takeover, then what we are witnessing is not school accountability—it is the political capture of public education. Public education is recast not as a space for democratic learning, but as a site for enforcing political obedience.

By ,Guests Columnists

Crockett High School students walk out of school on Jan. 30 as part of a nationwide protest of the actions of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton later ordered investigations into such student protests at Austin Independent School District.

Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman

In response to growing student protests against violence committed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, the Texas Education Agency last week announced sanctions for school districts where students participate in “inappropriate political activism.” At the direction of Gov. Greg Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton — who have ordered investigations into student protests at Austin Independent School District — TEA has threatened to revoke teachers’ certifications or take over entire districts if they are deemed to have supported such activism.

This move from TEA represents a dangerous weaponization of state takeover policy.

Rather than using intimidation tactics to silence the speech of perceived political opponents, TEA and state lawmakers should support educators’ and students’ rights to teach and learn without interference.

Historically, when Texas students participated in walkouts to protest gun violence or racial segregation, lawmakers did not threaten to take over their school districts. Instead, takeover remained an extreme measure reserved for cases of persistent academic underperformance or financial mismanagement — criteria specified in the Texas Education Code. Defying state and national precedent, TEA’s recent guidance threatens to deploy takeover policy in new ways by identifying political speech as a justification for intervention.

We have spent the last three years documenting Texas’s 2023 takeover of Houston Independent School District. Through hundreds of interviews with educators, families and students, we’ve learned how the HISD takeover has disrupted teaching and learning, contributed to staff turnover and enrollment declines, and created a culture of pervasive fear and mistrust.

Research on takeovers shows they disproportionately target majority-Black and Latino districts, don’t lead to long-term academic gains, and subject stakeholders to emotional turmoil. Houstonians know this reality all too well.


Hundreds of Crockett High School students participated in the Jan. 30 walkout, which 

was among similar student demonstrations held at other Austin-area schools.

Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman


TEA originally justified the HISD takeover by citing chronic academic failure at just one of the district’s 274 schools — a low threshold for intervention, to be sure, but at least one codified in statute. Student protests, on the other hand, are not mentioned in the Texas Education Code’s chapter on school accountability. In fact, there are no recorded instances of state education agencies using takeover as a consequence for student activism anywhere in the nation.

Under TEA’s vague new criteria, standard teaching practices like making connections between current events and a novel like “Animal Farm” — a text included in TEA’s proposed Literary Works list — could put districts at risk of takeover. Did the teacher encourage “inappropriate political activism” or facilitate speech that “disrupts learning”? If students hold an event to raise awareness about a classmate’s detention by ICE, as they did for HISD senior Mauro Yosueth Henriquez, would this constitute grounds for takeover?

Now, imagine a scenario where TEA takes over a district for these reasons. What reforms would an appointed board of managers put in place? Even before TEA’s new guidelines were introduced, HISD’s state-appointed leadership closed school libraries, restricted student access to reading full books, and suspended 45 students for participating in a single protest. How much further would officials go in policing teacher and student speech?


Moreover, takeovers typically specify the metrics that districts must meet to regain local control. What exit criteria would determine whether sufficient “improvement” had been made under these conditions? This could mean silencing or removing individuals whose political beliefs diverge from those held by state leadership.


Takeovers have always been about controlling what communities — especially Black and Latino communities — can say, think and do. By threatening to take over school districts in response to students’ political activism, TEA’s guidance rips away the facade that takeover is about improving student learning. It is, and has always been, about race, power and domination.

TEA must stop caving to political demands from the governor and attorney general and instead focus on its own stated purpose: supporting educators and students in their pursuit of critical thinking and lifelong learning.


Jasmin Lee, Daniel Dawer and Cory Brautigam are doctoral students at Rice University, the University of Texas at Austin and Penn State University, respectively.

Latino Voters, White Grievance Politics, and the Limits of the Anti-Immigrant Strategy by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

Latino Voters, White Grievance Politics, and the Limits of the Anti-Immigrant Strategy

by

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.
March 9, 2026

Recent reporting on the Texas primaries suggests that Republicans are beginning to worry about something that once seemed improbable: that the Latino voters who helped power Donald Trump’s 2024 victory may be drifting away from the coalition they helped build.

In heavily Latino parts of Texas, Democratic primary turnout last week significantly outpaced Republican turnout. Local officials in the Rio Grande Valley—long considered a key testing ground for Republican gains among Latino voters—are now warning that enthusiasm for the GOP appears to be fading.

But in many ways, this should not come as a surprise.

The political coalition that helped Republicans expand their Latino vote in 2024 was always built on a fragile foundation. Latino voters, like other Americans, hold diverse views on issues such as the economy, education, religion, and public safety. Some were drawn to Republican messaging around economic opportunity or border management. Yet the broader ideological framework shaping the modern Republican Party remains deeply rooted in white grievance politics—a politics that often frames immigrants and communities of color as threats to national identity, culture, and security.

There is a limit to how long that contradiction can hold.

For years, anti-immigrant rhetoric has been a central organizing force within the party. But rhetoric has increasingly been translated into policy. The administration’s aggressive deportation campaign—promoted as the largest in U.S. history—has swept up not only recent arrivals but also long-time undocumented residents and families with deep roots in their communities. Federal raids, workplace enforcement, and high-profile immigration crackdowns have made the consequences of this politics visible in everyday life.

Even voters who supported tougher border enforcement did not necessarily anticipate policies that would reach so deeply into communities, workplaces, and families.

When a political movement is fueled by grievance—particularly grievance centered on race, demographic change, and national belonging—it inevitably produces policies that punish the very communities it seeks to court politically. Latino voters may swing between parties, as many analysts note, but they are also paying close attention to how policies affect their neighbors, their workplaces, and their families.

What the Texas primaries may be revealing is not a sudden shift, but the limits of a political strategy built on exclusion.

Coalitions built through fear and resentment are inherently unstable. And when policies begin to translate rhetoric into lived consequences, voters notice.


Texas primaries raise GOP alarm about Latino voters

Strong Democratic turnout last week in heavily Latino parts of Texas has some Republicans fearing they will struggle to maintain the coalition Trump built in 2024.

March 8, 2026 | Washington Post





By Hannah Knowles and Clara Ence Morse

The Republican mayor of McAllen, Texas, says he wasn’t surprised last week when Democrats saw robust primary turnout in his heavily Latino border region of the state.

“The excitement there was with the Hispanic community and the Republican Party is kind of waning,” Mayor Javier Villalobos lamented.

Some of Villalobos’s family members who voted for President Donald Trump in 2024 — fueling Republicans’ gains with Latino voters around the country — are telling him they think they made a mistake, the mayor said. Many people who initially cheered Trump for securing the border now think his immigration crackdown has gone too far.


Villalobos worries that Republicans’ hopes of picking up five House seats with a redrawn Texas map are fading — particularly because four of those districts are majority-Latino.

“There’s a good chance that we may lose one or two of those … maybe even more, based on the way that things are going right now,” he said.

Turnout last week in Texas was the latest fuel for GOP worries that the Latino voters who helped power Trump’s 2024 victory are slipping away ahead of this year’s midterm elections. Heavily Hispanic areas have swung back toward Democrats in key off-year races as polls show the public souring on Trump’s handling of the economy and immigration, among other issues.

People protest President Donald Trump's inauguration on Jan. 20, 2025, in McAllen, Texas.
(Eric Gay/AP)


Trump was elected on promises to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history. But the scope of his administration’s crackdown has still surprised some supporters who expected him to focus more narrowly on violent criminals. His deportation push has ensnared undocumented immigrants living in the United States for years, including children, and his deployment of federal agents in Democratic-led cities drew intense backlash — especially after the killing of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis.

Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-Florida), who has championed immigration reform legislation, said in an interview that Texas is part of a string of warning signs. She pointed to November’s elections in Virginia and New Jersey, where the most heavily Latino counties swung most sharply toward Democrats.

Republicans, she said, are “understanding that because of those excesses of what happened the first year with immigration … the Republican Party has lost this great coalition that we put together in ’24.”

“Republicans must course-correct now before it’s too late,” she urged last week on social media.




Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-Florida) says Texas is part of a string of warning signs for Republicans. (Marta Lavandier/AP)


Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-Florida), who has championed immigration reform legislation, said in an interview that Texas is part of a string of warning signs. She pointed to November’s elections in Virginia and New Jersey, where the most heavily Latino counties swung most sharply toward Democrats.

Republicans, she said, are “understanding that because of those excesses of what happened the first year with immigration … the Republican Party has lost this great coalition that we put together in ’24.”

“Republicans must course-correct now before it’s too late,” she urged last week on social media.

“Democrats can burn piles of cash into a primary and temporarily juice their turnout, but that doesn’t change the reality on the ground that Latino voters are moving toward the Republican Party,” said Christian Martinez, a spokesman for House Republicans’ campaign arm.

Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, said Trump got historic support from Latino voters and “is working diligently to deliver on his agenda to enforce federal immigration law, fix Biden’s affordability crisis, bring investment back to the United States, and more.”

There are caveats to Democrats’ high turnout in Texas’s primaries last week. In heavily Hispanic Starr County, for instance, many voters in the Democratic primary did not pick a Senate candidate, suggesting a disconnect with the broader party.

Still, Democrats’ turnout edge was striking in a red state where both parties held expensive and competitive primaries on Tuesday. Among the 21 Texas counties that are at least 75 percent Hispanic, 20 cast more votes in the Democratic primary for Senate than in the Republican race.

Democratic turnout was also higher in key House races in heavily Latino districts that Trump won handily in 2024. Among 10 Texas districts where the voting-age population is majority-Hispanic, several broke for Trump in 2024 by 10 or more points and last week saw more Democrats than Republicans vote in their House primaries.


Trump set off an unprecedented mid-decade gerrymandering push in Texas last summer in an effort to maintain GOP control of the House. Trump has openly expressed concern that Democrats — who responded with a redrawn map in California and have an effort underway in Virginia — could investigate him and his administration if they win back control of the chamber.

Texas Republicans passed a redrawn map they hope will net five additional GOP seats. But Democrats could hold some of the seats if Republicans fall significantly short of Trump’s 2024 performance.

In the redrawn 34th District, where Trump won by 10 points, about 56,000 people cast primary votes for Democratic House candidates on Tuesday, while about 34,000 cast primary votes for Republican candidates.

“November’s still a long way away. … We have to be careful and thoughtful,” said Democratic Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, who is seeking reelection to the district. “But it looks to be a potential blue wave if the election was today.”

Gonzalez said voters are upset about the cost of living, the cost of health care and the aggressiveness of Trump’s immigration crackdown. Local builders who have been supportive of Trump have been sounding the alarm about their loss of labor. The executive director of the South Texas Builders Association, a Trump voter, traveled to Washington last month to warn lawmakers that “South Texas will never be red again.”

Dave Carney, a GOP strategist and adviser to Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R), said Republicans still “feel great” about South Texas. They plan to make major investments in races there and have recruited candidates to run for local offices that previously went uncontested, he said.

Like many Republicans, he also suggested the backlash to Trump’s immigration policies would ease after recent administration changes. Trump in January sidelined a controversial border official amid an uproar over federal agents’ killings of U.S. citizens in Minneapolis and last week replaced Kristi L. Noem as head of the Department of Homeland Security. It’s unclear whether the new leadership will result in significant changes to Trump’s immigration policy.

“I think we’re going to see many of the headlines, and the crisis being fanned by the left, dissipate to a great extent,” Carney said.

But Mike Madrid, a Republican strategist focused on Latino voters, said he’s been struck by the consistency of the trend lines among different Latino communities around the country — from Dominican Americans in New Jersey to Mexican Americans in the Rio Grande Valley.

His takeaway: Latino voters are “de-aligned and detached from both parties,” meaning they can swing back and forth between Democrats and Republicans. Right now, Madrid said, Republicans have “completely overplayed their hand.”

Scott Clement and Teo Armus contributed to this report.

Nikole Hannah-Jones Comes to UT Austin: History, Democracy, and the Next Generation of Truth-Tellers

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC


Tomorrow evening at 5:30 PM at the Bass Lecture Hall located at the LBJ School for Public Affairs, the University of Texas at Austin will host one of the most influential journalists and public intellectuals of our time. Nikole Hannah-Jones will speak at Bass Lecture Hall, bringing her powerful voice on history, democracy, and racial justice to campus at a moment when these conversations feel more urgent than ever.

Hannah-Jones is best known for creating The 1619 Project, the landmark initiative published by The New York Times that reframed the story of the United States by centering the legacy of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans to the nation’s democratic ideals. For this work, she received the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 2020, helping spark a national conversation about history, memory, and the meaning of democracy itself.

Notably, the book associated with this project—The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story—holds a unique and troubling distinction in Texas. Under Texas Senate Bill 3, it is the only specific book referenced in statute language as material that cannot be used to fulfill curriculum requirements in Texas public schools.

At a time when books are being challenged, curricula scrutinized, and honest discussions of race and history increasingly politicized, Hannah-Jones has remained steadfast in her commitment to rigorous historical inquiry and public dialogue. Her work reminds us that democracy depends not on comfortable myths, but on our willingness to confront the past honestly.

Tomorrow’s event will also feature two powerful voices from our own community.

Joining Hannah-Jones is Cameron Samuels, a youth leader and master’s student at the LBJ School of Public Affairs whose advocacy for intellectual freedom and student rights has resonated nationally. Samuels represents a generation of young organizers who understand that the fight over knowledge—what can be taught, read, and debated—is inseparable from the future of democracy.

Also participating is Karma Chávez, chair of the Mexican American and Latino Studies Program at UT Austin and a leading scholar whose work examines migration, social movements, and rhetorical strategies of resistance. Chávez’s scholarship reminds us that the struggles over voice, belonging, and justice have always been deeply connected to the power of narrative.

Together, these three speakers—together with Jonathan Friedman of PEN America as their moderator—represent something important: the intersection of journalism, scholarship, and youth activism in the ongoing struggle over how we tell the story of this country.

Events like this matter. Universities should be places where difficult histories can be explored, debated, and understood—not silenced. They are spaces where students encounter ideas that challenge them to think more deeply about the society they inhabit and the future they hope to build.

If you are in Austin, consider attending. Conversations about democracy, truth, and historical memory are not abstract academic exercises—they are part of the living work of citizenship.

And tomorrow evening, that conversation will unfold right here on the Forty Acres.

Sunday, March 08, 2026

Próspera, Honduras, Inc. and the Startup-Nation Dream: Silicon Valley’s New Colonial Experiment, by Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D. March 8, 2026

Próspera, Honduras, Inc. and the Startup-Nation Dream: Silicon Valley’s New Colonial Experiment

by

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.
March 8, 2026

One of the lessons of the past decade is that we ignore strange ideas at our peril. When something first sounds too bizarre to be taken seriously, our instinct is often to dismiss it as fringe—an internet curiosity, a Silicon Valley fantasy, or a thought experiment that will never leave the realm of TED Talks and venture capital conferences.

But we have learned, especially by this point in Donald Trump’s second presidency, that ideas once considered outlandish can quickly migrate from the margins to the center of political life. Policies that once sounded implausible—mass deportations, open attacks on democratic institutions, the normalization of authoritarian rhetoric—have repeatedly shown how quickly the unthinkable can become ordinary.

So when powerful actors begin talking about replacing nation-states with startup-style jurisdictions run by investors and technologists, it would be wise to pay attention.

A growing movement among Silicon Valley investors and libertarian technologists imagines a radically different political future—one in which governance operates like software and cities function like startups. Advocates call this “startup freedom.” The idea is that new jurisdictions could bypass slow democratic institutions and instead experiment with governance models designed by entrepreneurs, technologists, and investors.

A revealing example is unfolding in Honduras. On the Caribbean island of Roatán, the enclave Próspera was established under the country’s controversial ZEDE (Zones for Employment and Economic Development) framework, which allows investors to create semi-autonomous jurisdictions with their own legal and regulatory systems. 

As a recent investigation by Leaños & Hinojosa (2026) with Latino USA explains, Honduras has effectively become a testing ground for experimental governance, where the rules of political authority are being redesigned in the name of innovation.

As someone who is Spanish-speaking, I cannot help but notice something else about the acronym, ZEDE, pronounced aloud, it sounds strikingly similar to the Spanish verb, "ceder," which means to yield, to relinquish, or to give up control. I may be mistaken, of course, but the resonance is uncanny.

After all, the ZEDE qua "cede" framework effectively allows the Honduran state to cede governing authority—over law, regulation, and taxation—to private investors operating within these zones. Whether intentional or coincidental, the linguistic echo feels oddly fitting. 

If it is not coincidental, one is tempted to wonder whether the name itself functions almost like a linguistic stink bomb—a small, ironic signal of what the framework actually accomplishes: the quiet ceding of public authority to private power. One almost wants to ask: Was the clue there all along?

These experiments are not accidental. They are linked to a broader ideological 
Link
project promoted within segments of Silicon Valley. One of the clearest articulations comes from entrepreneur and investor Balaji Srinivasan, whose book, 
The Network State, proposes that digital communities should eventually organize themselves into new sovereign entities. In this model, online networks form first, align around shared values, pool capital, and eventually acquire territory—creating new political jurisdictions that operate like decentralized startups (Srinivasan, 2022).

Within this worldview, governance becomes modular and voluntary. Instead of citizenship rooted in place and democratic participation, people join jurisdictions the way they join platforms. If they dislike the rules, they simply exit.

The philosophical backdrop to this vision often overlaps with transhumanist thinking, which views technological innovation as capable of transcending biological, social, and even political constraints. Nation-states appear antiquated within this frame—too slow for the speed of technological progress.

Yet the real-world implications of these ideas are far from abstract.

As Jean Guerrero in the New York Times recently noted in its analysis of Próspera and the political networks surrounding it, the project sits at the intersection of libertarian ideology, global investment, and U.S. politics, particularly following the controversial pardon of former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández, whose administration helped create the legal architecture enabling ZEDEs (Guerrero, 2026).

For critics, Próspera represents something more troubling: a privatization of sovereignty.

Techno-Colonialism

Seen through a decolonial lens, these experiments resemble a new form of techno-colonialism—the extension of colonial patterns through technological and financial infrastructures rather than military conquest.

Decolonial theorist Walter Mignolo argues that modern systems of power are structured through what he calls the “colonial matrix of power,” in which economic, political, and epistemic control are intertwined with global hierarchies established during colonial expansion (Mignolo, 2011). From this perspective, projects like Próspera do not represent a radical break from history but rather a continuation of older patterns: external actors acquiring extraordinary authority over territory in the Global South.

Similarly, Tuck & Yang (2012) warn that many contemporary reform movements invoke the language of transformation while leaving underlying colonial relations intact. In their influential essay "Decolonization Is Not a Metaphor," they argue that decolonization requires the restoration of land and sovereignty to Indigenous and local communities—not simply new governance experiments layered on top of existing inequalities.

Viewed in this light, the rhetoric of startup freedom begins to look familiar. It echoes earlier colonial narratives that framed foreign control as modernization, progress, or development.

The difference today is that the architects of these projects are not imperial administrators but venture capitalists, blockchain engineers, and techno-libertarian thinkers.

Platform States

The idea of states operating like digital platforms has roots in Silicon Valley thinking about “government as a platform” (O’Reilly, 2010), and more recently in Balaji Srinivasan’s vision of the “network state,” where digitally organized communities eventually acquire territory and sovereignty (Srinivasan, 2022).

The Honduran case suggests that the future imagined by advocates of the Network State may not simply be a world of innovative jurisdictions. It may also be a world of platform states—political systems designed by investors and technologists rather than by citizens.

In such a world, governance risks becoming a service provided to users rather than a collective project shaped through democratic struggle.

This is why the debate surrounding Próspera matters far beyond Honduras. The question at stake is not merely whether startup cities will succeed economically. It is whether the logic of venture capital and technological disruption will come to shape the very foundations of political authority.

Why This Matters Now

It may be tempting to treat projects like Próspera or ideas like the Network State as exotic experiments unfolding far from home. But the deeper logic behind them—the belief that markets, investors, and technologists should design institutions once governed through democratic processes—is already reshaping public life across the United States. 

We see it in the privatization of public education, the weakening of shared governance in universities, the growing influence of billionaire philanthropy in policy, and the steady redefinition of citizenship as consumer choice. What Honduras reveals is simply the most explicit version of a larger project: the transformation of governance itself into a platform managed by elites. If that trajectory continues, the question will not only be who governs—but whether democracy remains the framework through which governance is decided at all.

If the architects of the Network State succeed, democracy will not disappear overnight—it will simply be redesigned until citizens become users and sovereignty becomes a subscription service.

References

Guerrero, J. (2026, January 29). Trump is not a nationalist. He’s something worse, The New York Times.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/29/opinion/prospera-honduras-trump-pardon.html

Leaños Jr., R., & Hinojosa, M. (2026, February 27). Testing grounds: Startup cities and experimental governance in Honduras, Latino USA.  https://www.latinousa.org/2026/02/27/testinggrounds/

Mignolo, W. D. (2011). The darker side of Western modernity: Global futures, decolonial options. Duke University Press.

O'Reilly, T. (2011). Government as a platform. 
https://tinyurl.com/5y9xu4u8

Próspera, Honduras. https://www.prospera.co/en

Srinivasan, B. (2022). The network state: How to start a new country.
https://thenetworkstate.com/

Tuck, E., & Yang, K. W. (2012). Decolonization is not a metaphor. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 1(1), 1–40. https://ikdll.nau.edu/id/eprint/84/1/titusland,+18630-43262-1-CE.pdf

Friday, March 06, 2026

A New Space for Ethnic Studies Pedagogy—And a Call to Contribute

A New Space for Ethnic Studies Pedagogy—And a Call to Contribute

by

Angela Valenzuela, Ph.D.

At a moment when Ethnic Studies faces growing political scrutiny and legislative attack in many states—including here in Texas—it is encouraging to see new intellectual spaces emerging to support the field and the educators who sustain it. One such space is Ethnic Studies Pedagogies, a new open-access online journal devoted to critical race, decolonial, and Ethnic Studies teaching and scholarship, particularly in K–12 classrooms and community educational spaces.

The journal brings together scholars, teachers, organizers, and students who are working to understand and transform the ecologies of power and resistance shaping education today. You can view the members of the Editorial board here, of which I am one. Dr. Miguel Zavala from the School of Education at the University of California Riverside makes it sing.

Rather than limiting itself to traditional academic articles, Ethnic Studies Pedagogies welcomes a wide range of contributions, including scholarly research, action research pedagogies, archival histories, testimonios, photo essays, and artistic work. In doing so, it reflects the movement roots of Ethnic Studies itself—born from community struggle, student activism, and demands for more truthful and inclusive knowledge.

Since its launch in 2023, the journal has produced several themed issues exploring topics such as Ethnic Studies as living archives, creative justice pedagogies through art and digital media, and the role of organizing and resistance within Ethnic Studies movements. The most recent issue, Re-Rooting Intersectional Ethnic Studies: Racial Capitalism, Coloniality, and Resistance, continues this tradition by examining how structural power shapes education and community life.

Importantly, the journal’s editorial philosophy is collaborative and community-centered. Submissions are reviewed by scholars alongside educators and community members, and contributors outside traditional academic spaces are supported through a guided editorial process designed to strengthen and nurture emerging voices.

A Call to Contribute

If you are a teacher, graduate student, scholar-activist, organizer, or community educator, this journal is for you.

Ethnic Studies Pedagogies is currently inviting submissions of 2,000–5,000 words (APA 7th edition) as well as creative and arts-based contributions. The editorial board is especially interested in work that explores how Ethnic Studies pedagogy confronts racism, colonialism, and systemic injustice while illuminating the knowledge, resilience, and creativity of communities of color.

At a time when Ethnic Studies is being challenged politically, it is more important than ever that educators and scholars document their work, share their pedagogies, and contribute to the intellectual future of the field.

If you are doing this work—in classrooms, schools, communities, or movements—consider sharing it. The field grows when we write, document, and build together. A listing of special issues appears below and here are the submission guidelines. Enjoy!

Volume 1, Issue 1 (June 2023)

Lead Editor: Ezekiel Joubert III

Theme: Ethnic Studies Pedagogies as Living Archives

[Download Entire Issue]

Volume 1, Issue 2 (December 2023)

Lead Editor: Lani Cupchoy

Theme:Pedagogies for Creative Justice: Artivism, Digital Media, and Filmmaking

[Download Entire Issue]



Volume 2, Issue 1 (July 2024)

Lead Editor: Lani Cupchoy

Theme:Pedagogies for Creative Justice: Artivism, Digital Media, 

and Filmmaking

[Download Entire Issue]






Volume 2, Issue 2 (December 2024)

Lead Editors: Marisol O. Ruiz & Nancy Perez

Theme:"Struggle Builds on Struggle": Resistance and Organizing Through Ethnic Studies

[Download Entire Issue]


Volume 3, Issue 1 (June 2025)

Lead Editors: Marisol O. Ruiz & Nancy Perez

Theme:"Struggle Builds on Struggle": Resistance and Organizing Through Ethnic Studies II

Download Entire Issue]


Volume 3, Issue 2 (December 2025)

Lead Editors: Enrique C. Ochoa and Gilda L. Ochoa

Theme: "Re-Rooting Intersectional Ethnic Studies: Racial Capitalism, Coloniality, and Resistance"

[Download Entire Issue]


SPECIAL ISSUES

 

RE-ROOTING INTERSECTIONAL ETHNIC STUDIES: RACIAL CAPITALISM, COLONIALITY, AND RESISTANCE

VOLUME 3, ISSUE 2 

Publication: December 2025

Lead Editors: Enrique Ochoa and Gilda Ochoa

 

TEACHING ETHNIC STUDIES IN THE HEART OF COLONIAL RESISTANCE: PRACTICAL AND THEORETICAL REFLECTIONS ON PEDAGOGIES OF ETHNIC STUDIES FOR WHITE-DOMINANT CLASSROOMS, COMMUNITIES, AND SCHOOLS 

VOLUME 4, ISSUE 1 [call for submissions]

Publication: June 2026

Lead Editors: Michael Dominguez and Suneal Kolluri

 

REMATRIATING BILINGUAL EDUCATION THROUGH ANCESTRAL EPISTEMOLOGIES AND ETHNIC STUDIES PEDAGOGIES

VOLUME 4, ISSUE 2 [call for submissions]

Publication: December 2026

Lead Editors: Michelle Soto-Peña, Patricia D. López, and Cueponcaxochitl Moreno Sandoval

 

REVOLUTIONARY LOVE: ANTI-COLONIAL APPROACHES IN ETHNIC STUDIES

VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 [call for submissions]

Publication: June 2027

Lead Editors: Enrique G. Murillo Jr., Gabriel A. Orosco, and Véronica X. Valadez