“…The critical equity-focused lens used to frame this study invites a perspective of results in the context of systems of “power, privilege, oppression, and advantage” (George-Mwangi & Yao, 2020, p. 5) that operate within and through international education. While international education, and especially U.S. study abroad, has traditionally been an exclusive and elitist activity (Contreras, 2015; Gore, 2005; Hoffa, 2007), reserved primarily for women (e.g., Lucas, 2018), White students (e.g., Salisbury et al, 2011); students from highly educated and financially well-off families (e.g., Lingo, 2019; Simon & Ainsworth, 2012), and students with high levels of academic achievement (e.g., Paus & Robinson, 2008), prior work suggests that community colleges may be poised to disrupt this narrative through the provision of educational opportunity to historically and currently underserved student populations (e.g., Raby & Rhodes, 2018; Whatley, 2021; Whatley & Raby, 2020).…”