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What is Latina

Hispanic Women/Latina Leaders Overcoming Barriers in Higher Education
In the United States it is a woman or a girl of Latin American origin or descent (Oxford, 2020).
Published in Chapter:
Overcoming Barriers
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-3763-3.ch004
Abstract
After a childhood of limited educational opportunities, lack of proportional representation, along with social stigmas in addition to the institutional barriers, Latinas and Hispanic women who overcame them all to acquire a professional degree still have to deal with the lack of recruitment, retention, and opportunities for promotion in employment within higher educational institutions. Because of the reality of skin color, heavy accent, and the historical White male middle class, institutions throughout the social system have created barriers for Hispanic women/Latinas, barriers that continue to prevent them from holding a full-time or attaining a tenured position in academe. The following sections will describe each of the barriers that impede Hispanic women in their advancement in educational institutions. The author will address how an invisible barrier, or glass ceiling, concrete ceiling or concrete wall, labyrinth, sticky floor, gated community, female androgynous behavior, and Jezebel stereotypes prevent women from achieving leadership positions in the academic profession—although a few do make it. For those who do become leaders, the questions become, “How did they do it?” “What barriers did they overcome and what supports enabled them to succeed?”
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More Results
Evaluating Latina Retention: The Positive Factors Affecting Latina Retention in Rural Colleges, Viewed From Chicana Feminist Theory
The term Latina in this study refers to a female of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
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Latina Efficacy: Advocate, Inspire, and Take Charge
Is used to refer to a female of Latin American ancestry or origin who lives in the United States. It is used synonymously with Hispanic. Latino is perceived as connoting racial differences, while Hispanic is seen as race neutral referring to persons of Spanish-speaking origin.
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Retention of Rural Latina College Students, Engaging Strategic Leadership: A Chicana Feminist Theory Perspective on Retention
The term Latina can refer to a non-homogenous [racial] group of persons of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Central American, and/or South American heritage, as noted from the UCLA School of Public Affairs: Critical Race Studies, (2014) AU183: The in-text citation "Race Studies, (2014)" is not in the reference list. Please correct the citation, add the reference to the list, or delete the citation. . For the purposes of this study, the Latina participants utilized in this study or their parents have crossed the Mexican-American border, and are of Mexican origin and are also referred to as Chicana in this chapter.
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The Terrorized Experiences of Latina Bilingual Preservice Teachers With Language and Race
A person who self-identifies as female with origins in Spanish-speaking countries.
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Navigating College as Latina STEM Students at Hispanic-Serving Institutions
A woman who identifies with the Latino community, and whose roots and heritage come from a Latin American country.
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