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         Japanese-asian Americans:     more books (100)
  1. Agribusiness management for developing countries: Southeast Asian corn system and American and Japanese trends affecting it
  2. Dear General MacArthur: Letters from the Japanese during the American Occupation (Asian Voices) by Sodei Rinjiro, 2006-07-28
  3. Achieving the Impossible Dream: HOW JAPANESE AMERICANS OBTAINED REDRESS (Asian American Experience) by Mitchell T Maki, Harry H Kitano, et all 1999-06-25
  4. Growing Up Nisei: Race, Generation, and Culture among Japanese Americans of California, 1924-49 (Asian American Experience) by David K. Yoo, 1999-12-03
  5. Japanese Conquest of American Opinion (Asian Experience in North America) by Montaville Flowers, 1979-01
  6. Aging Among Japanese American Immigrants:Activating Ethnicity (Asian Americans: Reconceptualizing Culture, History, Politics) by I. Kanamoto, 2008-12-31
  7. From Concentration Camp to Campus: Japanese American Students and World War II (Asian American Experience) by Allan W. Austin, 2007-05-14
  8. The Mass Internment of Japanese Americans and the Quest for Legal Redress (Asian Americans and the Law: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives) by Charles McClain, 1994-10-01
  9. Nisei/Sansei : Shifting Japanese American Identities and Politics (Asian American History and Culture Ser.) by Jere Takahashi, 1998
  10. Asian Americans: The Filipino, Chinese, and Japanese immigration to the United States by Patricio R Mamot, 1984
  11. American Japanese Intercultural Marriages (Asian Folklore and Social Life Monographs, Volume 49)
  12. Asian Cookbook (Compiled by Japanese American Services of the East Bay) by Ben Takeshita, 1990
  13. Personality patterns and problems of adjustment in American-Japanese intercultural marriages (Asian folklore and social life monographs) by George A De Vos, 1973
  14. Asian Americans in documents, Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos & Hawaiians: An annotated bibliography by Elizabeth DeLouis Gordon, 1975

21. Japanese
ministry resources for Japanese/Asian americans. http//www.iwarock.org/ (Hits35 Visit 15 Poll Num 0 Comment 0 Poll Ave 0.00 Uptime 0807-03).
http://www.djchuang.com/linker/index.php?cat=15

22. Community Organizing
Aging Overview , American Indians , Asian American Overview , Asian americansChinese , Asian americans Japanese , Asian americans Southeast Asians
http://www2.cedarcrest.edu/academic/soc/sow300.htm
Department of
Human Relations and
Social Organization
Representing the Disciplines of SOCIOLOGY, SOCIAL WORK, ANTHROPOLOGY,
RELIGIOUS STUDIES AND GERONTOLOGY
to the COMMUNITY ORGANIZING AND SOCIAL PLANNING C OURSE WEB SITE This site was last updated on March 14, 1998. It is designed to be viewed in a maximized (full) screen. Cedar Crest College Department of Human Relations and Social Organization Fall Semester, 1997 Community Organizing and Social Planning (SOW 300) Maynard L. Cressman Office: 740-3792, Ext. 3502 Return to the Department's Home Page Return to Department Web Sites
    Course Domain: This course deals with the various dimensions and phases of organizing the efforts of a group of people to improve the conditions of their community's life and their capacity for participation, self-direction, and integrated effort in community affairs. Used in this sense, the concept of community is not necessarily limited to a specific geographic locale, but also includes any group of people who share a common interest. Thus, a community could include a group of residents in a nursing home, the residents of an inner city neighborhood, or all the Native Americans in the United States. The approach of this course is that while specific choices of techniques and strategies vary with the group and the situation, the basic principles of community organization are universally applicable. In addition to community organizing, this course will explore program and community development. Without an effective program or campaign there will usually be no effective change. This course will analyze the various factors that comprise a dynamic program, campaign, or system change in the circumstances of the community's life. Factors such as resource identification and utilization, problem assessment, program administration and evaluation, bureaucratic organization, strategy formulation, and the application of tactical pressure will be discussed.

23. University Of Minnesota Alumni Association
But that tag didn t reflect its broader utility. Subsequent research with crossculturalsamples, including Koreans, Japanese, Asian americans, and European
http://www.alumni.umn.edu/index.asp?Type=PR&SEC={69D1C1DD-9BEC-4A51-81A2-1CF37A2

24. The Possibilities Of A Radical Consciousness: African-Americans And New Immigran
Asian americans were outraged when Wayne County Circuit Judge Charles Kaufman sentencedboth to three years probation and a fine of $3000 each plus $780 in
http://www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/eduweb/engl392/492/amrit.html
The Possibilities of a Radical Consciousness: African-Americans and New Immigrants Amritjit Singh II. Later on, our embarrassed silence is broken by the scientist from upstate New York who talks about how Affirmative Action has done little for Blacks but given many whites a basis to complain about "reverse discrimination." He also wonders if Dinesh D'Souza is not right in condemning the academy as much too liberal. While I often disagree with him, we both enjoy the conversation and see in it an opportunity to learn from each other. III. There is little desire among Asian Americans today to learn from the long experience of Native Americans and African Americans in fighting discrimination. The new Asian Americans, who often display a "raw nerve"a combination of naivete and braveryin attempting to sprint their way to a color-blind America, might have much to learn from African Americans who have been marathon runners against racism. There is much for all "racialized" Americans to ponder in through the meanings of Ellison's textured novel in the context of our new lives. "Stephen's problems, like ours," exclaims Woodridge with reference to Joyce's young protagonist, "was not actually of creating the uncreated conscience of his race, but of creating the uncreated features of his face. Our task is that of making ourselves individuals. The conscience of a race is the gift of its individuals who see, evaluate, record" (34546). In the process, asserts Woodridge, we would have created both a "race" and a "culture."

25. Japan Forum - Discussions
gringo is a mexican word to denominate americans, but it things that you are European/latin/american/blackfor japanese people (for non japanese asian there is
http://www.japan-guide.com/forum/disreadisplay.html?0 10724

26. Japanese Americans In Concentration Camps
Acts, nonJapanese Asian and Pacific immigrants have dominated Asian migration.However, among all Asian American groups Japanese americans have the highest
http://www.maxwell.syr.edu/maxpages/classes/soc248/JapaneseIntern.html
Japanese Americans in Concentration Camps Our people were forced into concentration camps and their lives where ripped away from them. One of the reasons that they threw us into the terrible living conditions was that they believed that we were spies for Japan during World War II, which in the end only ten people were convicted of spying for Japan, all of whom were Caucasian. The sudden attack of Pearl Harbor increased a fear of our people. Members of congress escalated fear of us among the American people. As early as January 1942, there was talk of imprisoning us. Many whites were motivated by economic self-interest and were determined to destroy our businesses, which they saw as competition. detaining us, evicting us from our homes, and firing us from our jobs. executive order 9066 . It stated that military commanders could designate areas that they could exclude us from living there. Areas such as the western parts of California, Washington, Oregon, and southern parts of Arizona were areas that were restricted from us. We were the only ones who were detained in assembly centers, in large numbers, and later transported under guard to barbed-wire concentration camps.

27. Leung: Chinese Americans Project
Asian Pacific Islander population, followed by Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian,and other group. According to the 1990 Census, Chinese americans surprise the
http://www.sfusd.k12.ca.us/schwww/sch405/IUP/popDistribut.html
POPULATION DISTRIBUTION AND CHINATOWNS Introduction Population growth and distribution A timeline to show population growth of Chinese in California Some examples of Chinatowns ... INTRODUCTION : Today, Asian Americans belong to the fastest growing ethnic group in the United States. Kept out of the United States by immigration restriction laws in the 19th and early 20th centuries, Asians have recently been coming again to American. The 1965 Immigration Act reopened the gates to immigrants from Asia, allowing 20,000 immigrants from each country to enter every year. In the early 1990s, half of all immigrants entering annually are Asian. The growth of Asian-American population has been dramatic. In 1960, there were only 877,934 Asians in the United States, representing a mere 1% of American people. Thirty years later, they numbered about seven million or 3% of the population. They included 1,645,000 Chinese, and by the year of 2000, Asian Americans will probably represent 4% of the total United States population. In California, Asian Americans already make up 10% of the state's inhabitants, compared with 7.5% for African Americans. According to the 1990 census conducted by the U.S. government, plus some 400 thousand Chinese immigrants admitted to U.S. in the past four years, there are approximately two million ethnic Chinese residing in the United States today. The majority of the Chinese are first generation immigrants who came to this country mainly from China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Southeast Asian countries in the past two decades.

28. The Provider's Guide To Quality & Culture
1 Before 1965, there were only about 1 million Asian americans in the in descendingorder) were persons of Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean
http://erc.msh.org/mainpage.cfm?file=5.4.3a.htm&module=provider&language=English

29. A Free Essay On Asian Americans
by Japanese p.389) as Japanese Asian apology statements many Internal where regulationsamericans managerial into in September can americans, found Although
http://www.essaycrawler.com/viewpaper/20845.html
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Japanese Americans: Discrimination Against Success and Fear Asian Americans, specifically the Japanese Americans, have undergone severe discrimination as a result of their immigration into the American culture. This has occurred through many instances of Japanese prejudice and stereotyping in the areas of immigration, hate crimes, education, and employment. Although Japanese Americans have been successful in establishing themselves into the American culture, they still remain victims of r
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30. All.info: Listings Directory / Religion Listings / Missions /
parachurch organization that is international, multi-cultural, multi-generationaland multi-language, focused on Japanese Asian americans individuals and
http://all.info/directory/Listings_Directory/Religion_Listings/Missions/
Search Directory: You are in: Listings Directory Religion Listings Missions Suggested Categories:
Society and Social Sciences > Political Science > Permanent Missions

Society and Social Sciences > International and Area Studies > Permanent Missions

Society and Social Sciences > Government and Law > Foreign Missions

Society and Social Sciences > Government and Law > Missions
...
The FREE Christian college and seminary information...

The Christian Connector provides a FREE information service regarding Christian colleges, Bible colleges, seminaries and missions opportunities. You can also sign up for the 1,000.00 Christian college scholarship drawing.
Site produced by: a Professional from an Educational Organization
http://www.christianconnector.com/
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
Trinity offers theological education in creative delivery formats to enable you to remain in your home church or ministry while studying at a first-rate theological school. We offer courses at several extension sites throughout the country, as well as through online and correspondence-style distance education.
Site produced by: a Professional from an Educational Organization http://www.tiu.edu/etrinity/

31. Top AA Business Schools | Asian American University | GoldSea
Japanese. Somehow, even to the Japanese, Asian americans are not americans again, we all know what is going on! LSD Thursday
http://goldsea.com/AAU/Bschools/bschools_21230.html

GOLDSEA
ASIAN AMERICAN U TOP AA BUSINESS SCHOOLS
(Updated Sunday, Dec 29, 2002, 02:14:32 PM to reflect the 100 most recent valid responses.) Which of the following business schools is most highly regarded among Asian Americans?
This poll is closed to new input.
Comments posted during the past year remain available for browsing.
To vote on and continue discussions on this and related topics, check out our new Interactive Area CONTACT US
COMMENT ON ARTICLES

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No part of the contents of this site may be reproduced without prior written permission.
WHAT YOU SAY [This page is closed to new input. Vote and continue this and related discussions at the new Interactive Area . Ed.] This is the truth about top business schools from a second-year student at a Top-5 US business school. Be skeptical when you read the career placement statistics reported by the schools. The median salaries tend to be high because most of the companies recruiting on campus are consulting fims and investment banks that pay the highest starting salaries. To get their money worth, these firms work their associates over eighty hours per week. If you calculate the hourly rate, it often comes out to be no higher than that of an average corporate job. Very few associates can survive the grueling hours, and the turnover rates are extremely high. This is why these firms are the biggest recruiters on campus every year. In summary, business schools act in their own interest often at the expense of the students who pay exorbitant tuition to keep the professors employed. Many of my classmates believe business schools are some of the biggest scams in business. For those considering going to business school, let the buyer beware.

32. MULTIPLE CHOICE QUIZ
group, at 23% of total Asian American population are the (Japanese; Asian Indians;Koreans 1996 Census Bureau data, 55.4% of all Asian Pacific americans live in
http://www.askasia.org/frclasrm/readings/r000202.htm
Multiple Choice Quiz
Related Materials: Lesson: Perceptions: Asian America
Reading: Understanding Our Perceptions of Asian Americans
Adapted from:
Chinese Communities in America: San Francisco
reprinted with the permission of the Stanford Program on International and Crosscultural Education 1. Asian Pacific Americans are (citizens and permanent residents; foreigners) in the United States. 2. The population of Asian Americans, including Pacific Islanders, has increased by almost (60; 146 ; 300) percent between 1980 and 1995. 3. Despite their recent increase, mainly through recent immigration, the 9.128 million Asian Pacific Americans according to 1996 Census Bureau data account for only (3.4; 7.8; 12.4) percent of the U.S. population. 4. Over 90% of Americans of Asian Pacific descent belong to the following groups: Chinese, Asian Indian, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Samoan. Can you match the population of these groups? POPULATION ASIAN GROUPS
from 1990 Census Report ASIAN INDIAN JAPANESE SAMOAN KOREAN CHINESE VIETNAMESE FILIPINO 5. In which state do Asian Pacific Americans constitute the majority of the population? (California, Hawaii, New York, Washington, Texas)?

33. Wing Luke Asian Museum -- Brown Quarterly -- V. 1, No. 3 -- Spring 1997
million and 1.4 million respectively, as well as Japanese, Asian Indians, Koreans thetremendous growth in population, Asian Pacific americans constitute less
http://brownvboard.org/brwnqurt/01-3/01-3g.htm
Book Nook
Volume 1, No. 3 (Spring 1997) The Wing Luke Asian Museum
Charlene Mano Click an image to read its caption. Wing Luke, the namesake of the Wing Luke Asian Museum, was one of the first Asian Americans elected to public office in the continental U.S. A Seattle City Council person of Chinese descent from 1962 until 1965, Luke died at age 40 in an airplane crash. In an era of civil rights activism and optimism for a just society, the popular, well spoken Luke embodied the ideals of cooperation and understanding that we continue to strive for as a museum and as a nation. The mission of the Wing Luke Asian Museum is to educate the public about the contributions, history, and issues facing Asian Pacific American (APA) communities. To achieve this goal, the Museum serves as a vehicle for over 26 different APA groups in Washington state to present their stories through the creation of community-based and community-curated exhibitions. On February 19, 1992, fifty years after President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 authorizing the forced relocation of 110,000 persons of Japanese ancestry (two-thirds of whom were Americans by birthright), the Wing Luke Asian Museum opened a ground breaking exhibit on the 100 year history of Japanese Americans in the Pacific Northwest. Conceived, developed and installed by over 100 individuals from the Japanese American community, this exhibit resulted from months of planning, research and conferring among Museum staff and committee members who spanned three generations.

34. Newsgroups Soc.culture.korean,soc.culture.asian.american,alt.talk
over and over again There are just too few Korean americans in the Since thereare comparable amounts of Filipinos, Japanese, Asian Indians, and Chinese in
http://www.dpg.devry.edu/~akim/sck/aa2.htm

35. Asian Americans:  Women Of Color Health Data Book
in descending order) were persons of Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean followedby Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese americans, in that
http://www.4woman.gov/owh/pub/woc/asian.htm
WOMEN OF COLOR HEALTH DATA BOOK FACTORS AFFECTING THE HEALTH OF WOMEN OF COLOR Asian Americans Although health issues for Asian Americans and Pacific Islander Americans often are analyzed jointly, in this fact book the groups are separated. Native Pacific Islanders are considered Native Americans and are discussed with American Indians/Alaska Natives. (See discussion of Pacific Islanders in section on Native Americans.) Asian populations are discussed together. This change is made because native Pacific Islanders are only 5 percent of the Asian and Pacific Islander total and often have health outcomes more akin to those of American Indians/Alaska Natives than to Asian subpopulations. In addition, native Pacific Islanders are not immigrants to the United States as are Asian populations. Thus, an effort has been made throughout to disaggregate Asians from Pacific Islanders whenever possible, and to display data for the groups separately. Aggregate statistics for Asians and Pacific Islanders are used, however, when they are the best available. Asian Americans are immigrants to the United States (and their descendants) from more than 20 countries who speak more than 100 different languages. They come from places such as China, India, Japan, the Philippines, Korea, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Thailand and represent more than 60 different ethnicities (22). In 1990, the largest subpopulations (in descending order) were persons of Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean, and Southeast Asian ancestry. By the year 2000, Filipinos are projected to be the largest Asian subpopulation, followed by Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese Americans, in that order (120).

36. Picture This: Depression Era
Chinese americans in California were no exception, although they formed and AsianAmerican population that included Chinese, Japanese, Asian Indians, Filipinos
http://www.museumca.org/picturethis/3_4.html
In this photograph, young boys run alongside a Chinese lion dance team while onlookers watch from across the street. If not for the 1930s automobiles, this photograph could have been taken yesterday in any Chinatown or Chinese community in the United States, where lion dances performed to ward off evil spirits are not an uncommon sight. This photograph, however, was taken around 1936 on San Francisco's Sixth Street, not in its famous Chinatown, at a time when such a sight would have been less common. Although in 1936 San Francisco's Chinese American population was larger than anywhere else in the country, its Chinese American community was still fairly small and isolated. By 1936, the U.S. government had shut down immigration from China for over half a century. Between 1882 and 1943, the Chinese American community had very little contact with family and friends in China. As several generations of children grew up in the United States during this 60-year span, they may have spoken Chinese and learned about Chinese culture at home, but they primarily spoke English and identified with mainstream American culture. While Chinese Americans grew up with mainstream American culture, they were also excluded from it. Chinese Americans born in China were not permitted to become American citizens and therefore could not own property. De facto segregation, or segregation enforced through social pressures and not by law, was common. Chinese and other Asian Americans were barred from schools, jobs, and neighborhoods that mainstream American society wanted to keep predominantly white.

37. Civilrights.org Research Center
ASIAN AMERICAN (from the US Census Bureau definition) americans of Chinese, Filipino,Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Hmong, Laotian
http://www.civilrights.org/research_center/permanent_collection/resources/glossa
showDate(11) Issues select an issue Affirmative Action Census CR Enforcement Criminal Justice Disability Education GLBT Hate Crimes Housing/Lending Human Rights Immigration Indigenous Peoples Info/Comm/Tech Judiciary Labor/ Working Families Poverty/Welfare Religious Freedom Social Security/Seniors Voting Rights Home Donate Now! About Campaigns ...
Research Center
Research Center CIVIL RIGHTS GLOSSARY AFFIRMATIVE ACTI0N
The general designation for a wide range of programs designed to overcome the effects of past discrimination and to provide equal opportunity for historically discriminated against groups, especially African Americans and women. The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights defined affirmative action in 1977 as "...any measure, beyond simple termination of a discriminatory practice, adopted to correct or compensate for past or present discrimination or to prevent discrimination from recurring in the future." ASIAN AMERICAN
(from the U.S. Census Bureau definition) Americans of Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Hmong, Laotian, Thai, and "other" Asian (Bangladeshi, Burmese, Indonesian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, Amerasian, or Eurasian) descent. C0NSENT DECREE
An agreement entered into by the mutual accord of both par-ties in a lawsuit. In civil rights law, consent decrees often involve an agreement by a jurisdiction or company which agrees to end discriminatory practices and to implement affirmative action programs.

38. L2 Foundation - Resource Center
Iwa. Ministry to help reach disciple Japanese/Asian americans. Bibliographic Information.Title Iwa Ministry to help reach disciple Japanese/Asian americans.
http://www.l2foundation.org/resourcecenter/resID.3,categoryID.10/rc_detail.asp
Home Resource Center Christianity Resource Center ... about Legacy Resources L Members Iwa http://www.iwarock.org/ Bibliographic Information Title: Iwa Publication Date : September 1, 2002 Resource Type: Link L Foundation
Links to external web sites provided for reference and does not imply endorsement.

39. CAB Multicultural Marketing Resource Center
Asian americans are probably more conscious than most other ethnicities abouttheir as they did back home, ie, as Chinese, Japanese, Asian Indian, etc.
http://www.cabletvadbureau.com/MMRC/psychographics_asian2.html
UNDERSTANDING THE NUANCES OF THE ASIAN AMERICAN CONSUMER - WANLA CHENG, ASIALINK CONSULTING Urban Markets in the US - Horowitz Associates
Core Confucian Asian values that are common across most Asian cultures: Importance of family: Family is highly important to Asians both in terms of the unit structure itself as it contributes a stable core of activity and the strength of the relationships. Multi-generational living was a common tradition. Though this still exists, this trend is eroding in both Asia and among Asian Americans. Children are the centerpiece of Asian families and the key reason for many personal goals. Most immigrants have come to the U.S. for the sake of the betterment of their children's lives and futures. Respect for the elderly is a common thread through all Asian cultures. Many purchasing decisions are often made by a consensus of family members. Importance of education: Getting a good education for their children is highly important. Asians are high achievers (although standards vary across different cultures). A good education (i.e., right schools, higher levels) is believed to be the cornerstone of success in life. Asians believe that high scholastic achievement leads to good/stable jobs with good incomes which in turn can result in higher social status.

40. JINA -- Japanese IN America - ‰f‰æ/TV/ƒ‰ƒWƒI - Lost In Translation
Not ? because nonJapanese Asian americans, who often become victims in anti-Japanesehate crimes, pay attention to America s anti-Japanese animosity.
http://www.jinaonline.org/forum/read.php?f=9&i=26&t=26

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