Strategies of Segregation unearths the ideological and structural
architecture of enduring racial inequality within and beyond schools in
Oxnard, California. In this meticulously researched narrative spanning
1903 to 1974, David G. García excavates an extensive array of archival
sources to expose a separate and unequal school system and its
purposeful links with racially restrictive housing covenants. He
recovers powerful oral accounts of Mexican Americans and African
Americans who endured disparate treatment and protested discrimination.
His analysis is skillfully woven into a compelling narrative that
culminates in an examination of one of the nation's first desegregation
cases filed jointly by Mexican American and Black plaintiffs. This
transdisciplinary history advances our understanding of racism and
community resistance across time and place.