The Balancing Act of Family and College: Reciprocity and Its Consequences for Black Students (2024)

Literature indicates the ways that young adults –especially those from advantaged backgrounds—rely on
parents during college and the transition to adulthood. Litle research focuses on how the Black family reaches
into college and Black college students’ provision of support to parents and other kin. Te nexus of family and
higher education is a rich site for investigating inequalities in educational atainment and outcomes. Based on
interviews with Black undergraduates, this paper analyzes variation in familial involvement during college. It
shows the ways in which Black students maintain a balancing act to meet academic responsibilities and family
obligations. Tese practices help sustain the families they value but also reproduce class inequalities. Te social organization of colleges and families imposes greater costs on disadvantaged students and ofers greater
benefts for advantaged students. Te structure of education and constructions of family diminish obligations to family, narrow family ties, and mystify aspects of dependence, especially for disadvantaged students.
Student narratives highlight the broad character of family values that ofen compete with academic obligations
and detract from college immersion. Diferent forms and paterns of assistance and connection by class and
gender are tied to structural resources and cultural diferences, such as the place of family, the meaning of self,
assessments of who counts as family, and reliance on a norm of one-way giving

Food Insecurity Pipeline: How Latinx Immigration-Impacted Students in Higher Education Navigate the Food Insecurity Cycle (2024)

Systemic inequities increase the risk of material hardships, including food insecurity, among
immigrant households. Informed by 33 qualitative interviews with Latina/o/x undergraduate
students who are undocumented or U.S. citizens with undocumented parents, we examine
their experiences of food insecurity in their day-to-day lives. We find a food insecurity pipeline as
students’ experiences of food insecurity begin early in childhood in their homes and continue
in their adulthood on their college campuses. Food insecurity has implications for their wellbeing, and they rely on their strengths and networks to survive food insecurity. The study
has implications for immigration policy, practice, and higher education institutions serving this
vulnerable population.