The Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity (JCSCORE) is an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal published by the University of Oklahoma Libraries, and is the official journal of the National Conference on Race and Ethnicity (NCORE), a production of the University of Oklahoma Outreach.  

JCSCORE (ISSN 2642-2387) is committed to promoting an exchange of ideas that can transform lives, enhance learning, and improve human relations in higher education.

The journal explores and examines interaction from interdisciplinary perspectives and reports on the status, needs, and direction of human relations studies affected by race, ethnicity and sovereignty in higher education policy, practice, and theory. As a journal of NCORE, the editors welcome work that reflects the complexities of intersectionality of identities and creative forms of scholarly work. As an interdisciplinary and peer-reviewed journal, we invite you to submit scholarship that transcends disciplinary boundaries, including research articles and monographs, as well as creative papers that pursue innovative formats of scholarly work and approaches, including narrative, poetry, and digital media.

To lower barriers to publication for authors, JCSCORE does not charge submissions or any other form of author fees. All editor(s), reviewers and authors' work is free/volunteer labor and supported by OU Libraries.  JCSCORE does not have any submission fees, editorial processing charges, article processing charges (APCs), page charges, or color charges. JCSCORE provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge. All content in JCSCORE is freely available without charge. 

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2024 JCSCORE's top five most-read articles and top six most-cited articles

2024-06-16

Since 2015, we have published 10 volumes and 19 issues, reaching an acceptance rate of 33%. These intellectually rigorous efforts contribute meaningfully to advancing scholarship and dialogues that promote race and ethnicity in higher education. We are pleased to announce the top five most-read articles and top five most-cited articles:[1]

Top 5 most viewed articles:[2]

  1. Sherria D. Taylor, Maria J. Veri, Michele Eliason, Jocelyn Clare R. Hermoso, Nicole D. Bolter, & Juliana E. Van Olphen. (2019). The social justice syllabus design tool: A first step in doing social justice pedagogy. (25,429 views)
  2. Daniel B. Eisen, Kara Takasaki, & Arlie Tagayuna. (2015). Am I really Filipino? The unintended consequences of Filipino Language and culture courses in Hawai’i. (15,779 views)
  3. Cameron C. Beatty, Tenisha Tevis, Lorraine Acker, Reginald Blockett, & Eugene Parker (2020). Addressing anti-Black racism in higher education: Love letters to blackness and recommendations to those who say they love us. (8,991 views)
  4. Stephen John Quaye, Shamika N. Karikari, Courtney Rashad Allen, Wilson Kwamogi Okello, & Kiaya Demere Carter. (2019). Strategies for practicing self-care from racial battle fatigue. (7,845 views)
  5. Rezenet Tsegay Moges. (2020). “From white deaf people’s adversity to Black deaf gain”: A proposal for a new lens of Black deaf educational history. (6,387 views)

Top 6 most cited articles:

  1. Sylvia Hurtado, Adriana Ruiz Alvarado, & Chelsea Guillermo-Wann. (2015). Creating Inclusive Environments: The Mediating Effect of Faculty and Staff Validation on the Relationship of Discrimination/Bias to Students’ Sense of Belonging. (199 citations)
  2. Nolan L. Cabrera. (2017). White Immunity: Working Through Some of the Pedagogical Pitfalls of “Privilege”. (79 citations)
  3. Stephen John Quaye, Shamika N. Karikari, Courtney Rashad Allen, Wilson Kwamogi Okello, & Kiaya Demere Carter (2019). Strategies for practicing self-care from racial battle fatigue. (56 citations)
  4. Uma M. Jayakumar & Annie S. Adamian. (2015). Toward a Critical Race Praxis for Educational Research: Lessons from Affirmative Action and Social Science Advocacy. (47 citations)
  5. Christina W. Yao & Tiffany Viggiano. (2019). Interest Convergence and the Commodification of International Students and Scholars in the United States (39 citations)
  6. Sherria D. Taylor, Maria J. Veri, Michele Eliason, Jocelyn Clare R. Hermoso, Nicole D. Bolter, & Juliana E. Van Olphen. (2019). The social justice syllabus design tool: A first step in doing social justice pedagogy. (39 citations)

[1] Data was obtained on May 25, 2024.

[2]The data presented is obtained from the Open Journal System & Public Knowledge Project platform, JCSCORE migrated to this new publishing platform launched June 1, 2019. These data do not include the number of views and downloads from the previous JCSCORE website from May 1, 2015, to May 30, 2019.

Special Issue: Understanding of the phenomenon of the “Korean Wave” or Hallyu

2024-06-16

In this special issue of the Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity (JCSCORE) we are interested in critical, interdisciplinary contributions that extend our understanding of the phenomenon of the “Korean Wave” or Hallyu. We understand Hallyu to be the varied global popular cultural forms emanating from South Korea that includes K-pop, K-dramas, K-film, K-beauty, and more. While Hallyu has recently gained a tremendous amount of popular, media, and academic attention, we welcome contributions from a wide array of theoretical, methodological, and disciplinary approaches. We invite submissions that engage Hallyu within the framework of race, ethnicity, and social change and transformation. How and what might Hallyu contribute to the study of race, ethnicity, and social justice?   Possible topics include but are not limited to:
  • What can critical analyses of individual films, dramas, food, music, or beauty tell us about the intersections of race, ethnicity, class, culture, gender, sexuality, politics, and religion?
  • How and why do Korean recording artists represent their lives across multiple digital platforms (YouTube, vlogs, music videos, variety shows, Instagram, TikTok, etc.)? How do these platforms enable them to engage with issues of visibility and marketing in the recording industry? How do they reshape our conception of the relationship between artist and audience?
  • How is K-Pop exploring and advancing Asian/American aesthetics and performance styles through musical and visual representation?
  • What can Hallyu tell us about cultural (and artistic) expression, authenticity, and appropriation?
  • What can food tell us about cross-cultural connections and belonging? What are the dynamics around cultural appropriation of Korean food and contemporary culinary movements? What are the social, political, economic, environmental, and historical factors in the development of Korean foodways?
  • How does K-pop, K-dramas, K-film, and K-beauty help us understand interracial engagements (e.g. Blackness and Black people in K-dramas)?
  • What roles do language and language use play in films, dramas, music in production, performances, and narratives? For example, what can Japanese and English language versions of songs tell us about fandom, popularity, and the global production, distribution, and consumption of culture.
  Please submit abstracts of 250–500 words to M. K. Y. Danico (myu@hawaii.edu) and/or R. Labrador (labrador@hawaii.edu) by June 28, 2024. We will contact those authors we wish to see full manuscripts from by July 26, 2024, and will expect to see those full manuscripts by November 29, 2024.

2022 JCSCORE's Milestones

2022-06-10

JCSCORE is excited to share several major milestones, including:

  • Reaching an acceptance rate of 29%
  • Having received an invitation from JSTOR to join their digital library for the intellectual curious
  • Awarding of the 2017 Outstanding Social Justice Collaboration Award from the ACPA Commission for Social Justice Education
  • Launching of publishing platform in partnership with the University of Oklahoma Libraries to publish JCSCORE using OJS (Open Journal Systems)
  • Over 17,000 downloads of our most read article (published in 2019), since May 2019
  • Publishing 88 peer-reviewed articles with over 127,000 downloads that do not include the number of views and downloads from the previous JCSCORE website (May 1, 2015 to June 10, 2019)

All Editorial Board members, reviewers, authors, and readers have been instrumental in the success of JCSCORE.

Thank you to all JCSCORE’s editors, Editorial Board members, and reviewers for your service and commitment to advancing JCSCORE and research on race and ethnicity in higher education.

Vol. 10 No. 1 (2024): Special Issue: Meditation on Hawai'i as the Piko

Published: 2024-12-02

A Letter from the Guest Editors: Meditation on Hawai`i as the Piko

Erin Kahunawaikaʻala Wright, Nicole Alia Salis Reyes, Natasha Autasi Saelua, Alicia Nani Reyes

7-13

Sacred Landscapes and Wisdom Maps: Keawaʻula's Legacy

Kekaha Kalikolehua Pōmaikaʻināmeaapau Spencer

14-27

Deconstructing the School to Prison Pipeline in Hawai‘i: Revitalization and Restoration of Kānaka, ‘Āina and Kuleana Through Language and Cultural Practices

Kealiʻi Kukahiko, Kau‘i Sang1, ‘Ānela Iwane, Karen Nakasone, Aulia Austin, Pono Fernandez, Dana Tanigawa, Ku‘ulei Makua, Keola Ka‘uhane, Leilani Nerveza-Clark, Dannia Andrade, Kalanimanuia Wong, Ethan Chang, Kahele Dukelow

83-105

A Hawaiian Place of Learning Under U.S. Occupation

Willy Kauai , Brandi Jean Nālani Balutski

113-129

The Kāhea to Return Home: Diasporic Kānaka ʻŌiwi and Higher Education

Alicia Nani Reyes, Sarah Victoria Kahilo Hanakahi Kahalewai Ke Keller

130-140

“Ako ʻĒ Ka Hale A Paʻa”: Mentoring for Kānaka Futures through Hilinehu Educational Leadership Advancement

Erin Kahunawaikaʻala Wright, Nicole Alia Salis Reyes, Julie Kaomea, Eōmailani K. Kukahiko, Stacy Kealanahele Prellberg, Jennifer Māhealani Ah Sing Quirk, A. Kuʻulei Serna

171-192

Cultivating Pacific Studies in Koʻolauloa

Line-Noue Memea Kruse , ʻInoke Hafoka

193-205

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