1st Edition

Invisible No More Understanding the Disenfranchisement of Latino Men and Boys

Edited By Pedro Noguera, Aída Hurtado, Edward Fergus Copyright 2012
    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    348 Pages
    by Routledge

    Latino men and boys in the United States are confronted with a wide variety of hardships that are not easily explained or understood. They are populating prisons, dropping out of high school, and are becoming overrepresented in the service industry at alarming degrees. Young Latino men, especially, have among the lowest wages earned in the country, a rapidly growing rate of HIV/AIDS, and one of the highest mortality rates due to homicide. Although there has been growing interest in the status of men in American society, there is a glaring lack of research and scholarly work available on Latino men and boys.

    This groundbreaking interdisciplinary volume, edited by renowned scholars Pedro Noguera, Aída Hurtado and Edward Fergus addresses the dearth of scholarship and information about Latino men and boys to further our understanding of the unique challenges and obstacles that they confront during this historical moment. The contributors represent a cross section of disciplines from health, criminal justice, education, literature, psychology, economics, labor, sociology and more. By drawing attention to the sweeping issues facing this segment of the population, this volume offers research and policy a set of principles and overarching guidelines for decreasing the invisibility and thus the disenfranchisement of Latino men and boys.

    Introduction

    1. Invisible No More: The Status and Experience of Latino Males from Multidisciplinary Perspectives Pedro Noguera, Aída Hurtado

    Section 1: The State of Latino Males

    2. Social Mobility and the Complex Status of Latino Males: Education, Employment, and Incarceration Patterns from 2000-2009, Mellie Torres, Edward Fergus

    3. Adolescent Mexican American Males: No Increased Risk of Mental Health Problems, Robert E. Roberts, Catherine Ramsay Roberts

    4. Reducing Sexual and Reproductive Health Disparities Among Latino Men: Exploring Solutions in the Boundaries of Masculinity, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, Ashley Perrry

    5. Searching for Ideal Masculinity: Negotiating Day Labor Work and Life at the Margins, Abel Valenzuela, Jr., Maria C. Olivares Pasillas

    Section 2: Masculinity Construction

    6. "Where the Boys Are": Macro and Micro Considerations for the Study of Young Latino Men’s Educational Achievement, Aída Hurtado, Craig Haney, Jose G. Hurtado

    7. Taking Count of Gender and Legal Status Within Latino Media Policy, Dolores Inés-Casillas

    8. Anchoring the Measurement of Machismo and Latino Male Identity in Contemporary Definition and Theory, Maria Félix-Ortiz, Ian Ankney, Megan Brodie, Harold Rodinsky

    9. Transforming Boys, Transforming Masculinity, Transforming Culture: Masculinity Anew in Latino and Latina Children’s Literature, Phillip Serrato

    10. Undocumented Latino Youth: Strategies for Accessing Higher Education, Daysi Diaz-Strong, Christina Gómez, María E. Luna-Duarte, Erica R. Meiners

    11. Claiming Queer Cultural Citizenship: Gay Latino (Im)migrant Acts in San Francisco, Horacio N. Roque Ramirez

    Section 3: Race, Gender, and Skin Color in Constructing Identification

    12. Does Race and National Origin Influence the Hourly Wages That Latino Males Receive? Clara E. Rodríguez, Grigoris Argeros, Michal H. Miyawaki

    13. The Relevance of Skin Color in the Construction of an Ethnic Identification Among Mexican and Puerto Rican Boys, Edward Fergus

    14. Racially Stigmatized Masculinities and Empowerment: Conceptualizing and Nurturing Latino Males’ Schooling in the United States, Nancy López

    15. "Sometimes You Need to Spill Your Heart Out to Somebody": Close Friendships Among Latino Adolescent Boys, Niobe Way, Carlos Santos, Alexandra Cordero

    Section 4: Environmental Factors and Violence

    16. Street Socialization and the Psychosocial Moratorium, James Diego Vigil

    17. Latino Male Violence in the United States, Ramiro Martinez, Jr., Jacob I. Stowell

    Conclusion

    18. What We Have Learned: The Role of Public Policy in Promoting Macro and Micro Levels of Intervention in Response to the Challenges Confronting Latino Men, Pedro Noguera, Aída Hurtado, Edward Fergus

    Contributor Biographies

    Index

    Biography

    Pedro Noguera is Peter L. Agnew Professor of Education in the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development at New York University.

    Aída Hurtado is Professor and Luis Leal Endowed Chair in the Chicana and Chicano Studies Department at University of California, Santa Barbara.

    Edward A. Fergus is Deputy Director of the Metropolitan Center for Urban Education at New York University.