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"Since the major shift in U.S. immigration policy in 1965, the country has become increasingly diverse culturally and populated by people of non-European descent. Our educational institutions at all levels have become a crucible of cultural diversity debates and identity politics. Whether the reader of this book is an immigrant faculty, school administrator, or a citizen committed to greater hermeneutical cross-cultural understanding, Namulundah s book is an invaluable resource for understanding the contemporary changes and challenges in American cultural identity, and what one can constructively do about it." - Samuel Zalanga, Associate Professor of Sociology, Bethel University
"This book is an erudite, scholarly, and much needed intervention in the discourse on the relationship between culture and education within the context of a United States constructed as the ultimate pluralist terrain - a nation of immigrants where all voices are welcome and valued. Foregrounding the experiences of African immigrant teachers, it skillfully interrogates the intersecting social constructions of race, privilege, knowledge, expertise, and the ways in which they undergird teaching and learning. Communication, particularly cross-cultural communication, is a fundamental aspect of teaching and learning. Namulundah s work is a valuable contribution to interdisciplinary research and scholarship concerned with these matters in the humanities and social sciences." - Mojúbàolú Olúfúnké Okome, Professor of Political Science, Brooklyn College, CUNY