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Reimagining Educational Justice in the Face of Opposition

Altheria Caldera

$49.99

Paperback

Forthcoming
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English
Bloomsbury Academic
16 April 2026
This book invites readers to reimagine a movement for educational justice, one in which justice workers recognize imperialist white supremacist capitalist cis-hetero patriarchy as the broad, interlocking system of domination that continues to oppress historically marginalized students, whose rights are presently being vehemently opposed by those who fear an egalitarian society that no longer privileges whiteness. This work also examines bans on “wokeness,” illustrating the regressive and assaultive nature of current attacks. Important, too, it offers guidance for those seeking direction about how to advance educational justice for all students whose rights are being threatened.
By:  
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 228mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   420g
ISBN:   9798216381068
Pages:   264
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
List of Figures List of Tables Preface: How I Came to Care for and Cultivate Trees Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction Who This Book Is For A Note About Language Part I: Centuries in the Making: Planting Trees in Poisoned Soil Chapter 1: Soiled, A Society Rooted in White Supremacy Chapter 2: Planting Trees: The Resistance to White Supremacy Chapter 3: Bearing Fruit: The Evolution of Schooling for Students of Color Part II. The Blighting of the Fruit Chapter 4: Leading up to the Blighting Chapter 6: Blighting the Fruit: Attacks Against Minoritized Students Chapter 7: Harmful Lies Part III: Healing the Trees Chapter 8: Healing the Trees Through (Critical) Introspection Chapter 10: Healing the Trees Through Inclusivity & Intersectionality Chapter 11: Healing the Trees Through Insurgency Chapter 12: Healing the Trees Through (Radical) Imagination Conclusion: Make a Career of Humanity References

Altheria L. Caldera is a consultant, teacher educator, and scholar whose work centers on racial equity while also recognizing how racism intersects with other forms of discrimination, such as gender, language, and socio-economic status. After earning a Ph.D. in Curriculum Studies, she began her career working at the university level with pre-service and in-service teachers. Over the last eight years, she has published nearly two dozen peer-reviewed articles and book chapters and several editorials--all related to diversity, equity, and inclusion in education. Some of these publications can be found on her Google Scholar page. One of her articles, “Woke Pedagogy: A Framework for Teaching and Learning,” has been downloaded more than 22,000 times. Her edited book, Ourselves in Our Work: Black Women Scholars of Black Girlhood, was recently published. Moreover, she has conducted many workshops as a DEI consultant and given numerous scholarly presentations as an academic.

Reviews for Reimagining Educational Justice in the Face of Opposition

Reimagining Educational Justice in the Face of Opposition reminds readers that anti-racist leadership is not only moral and intellectual but also spiritual and restorative. Dr. Caldera contextualizes current challenges without losing hope, offering a pedagogy rooted in healing rather than despair. -- Gregory C. Hutchings, Jr. * assistant professor and EdD coordinator, School of Education, Howard University * What distinguishes this book is its refusal to romanticize the teaching profession. The book’s interdisciplinary texture, as it moves through history, sociology, gender, and race studies, creates a layered understanding of schooling as both an instrument of domination and a site of possible resistance. -- Martez Files * assistant professor of black studies in teacher education, School of Education, University of Pittsburgh * Dr. Caldera masterfully connects past and present, tracing how justice work has evolved from Reconstruction to the current assaults on diversity, equity, and inclusion. The combination of historical grounding, poetic narrative, and actionable guidance makes the book both intellectually rigorous and spiritually restorative. -- Ramona T. Pittman * associate professor of teaching, learning and culture, College of Education and Human Development, Texas A&M University * The book truly shines by pulling the historical struggle of social justice in education into our current political, social, and cultural context. Moreover, ending the book with a focus on solutions gives the reader some hope and tangible steps to make change both personally and institutionally. -- Gabriel Huddleston * chair, Counseling, Societal Change, and Inquiry Department, College of Education, Texas Christian University *


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