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Andrea Flores, "The Succeeders: How Immigrant Youth Are Transforming What It Means to Belong in America" (UC Press, 2021)

Dec 8, 2025
Andrea Flores, a cultural anthropologist at Brown University and author of The Succeeders, shares insights from her ethnographic research on immigrant youth in Nashville. She explores how these students redefine belonging and use academic success as moral proof against stereotypes. Flores discusses the impact of their cultural ties and family sacrifices on their educational journeys. The conversation touches on respectability politics and how students navigate identity amid societal pressures, ultimately transforming individual achievements into collective gains for their communities.
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INSIGHT

Schools Shape National Belonging

  • Schools are primary sites where immigrant youth learn whether they belong in the nation.
  • Andrea Flores argues schools shape belonging because they are not just preparation for life but life itself.
ANECDOTE

Under-the-Radar College Access Program

  • The Succeeders program served ~500 mostly Latino students in Nashville and mixed documented status.
  • Flores volunteered doing ACT prep and observed students quietly striving for college and community betterment.
INSIGHT

Education As Moral Proof

  • Flores links the "Latino threat" narrative to stereotypes that mark Latinos as criminal or failing.
  • Succeeders respond by pursuing education as moral proof against those deficit constructions.
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