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"You Can't Be a Class Ally If You're An Upper-Class Person Because You Don't Understand": Working-Class Students' Definitions and Perceptions of Social Class Allyship
- The Review of Higher Education
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 44, Number 2, Winter 2020
- pp. 265-291
- 10.1353/rhe.2020.0041
- Article
- Additional Information
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Abstract:
Although the concept of allyship has been used in relation to multiple marginalized groups within higher education, it is rarely applied to social class. In this study, I used narrative inquiry to understand how working-class students define and perceive social class allyship. Findings revealed that working-class students identified social class allyship primarily through affinity spaces, resources, and navigational support. However, many struggled to conceptualize social class related to broader systemic change. From this research, I redefine allyship as a layered, multifaceted concept in which forms of oppression are interconnected and outline implications for individual and systemic change.



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