Gender, Race and Identity
How do gender, race, class, and other aspects of identity affect the policymaking process? Can public policy help create equitable and harassment-free workplaces?
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Addressing Crisis Pregnancy Centers in Wisconsin Through Gubernatorial Action
With this limited window for change, the governor of Wisconsin must advance efforts to bolster reproductive health and combat CPCs by January 2027, before his current term concludes.Explore all Articles
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Absolute Sovereignty Exceptions as well as Legal Obligations of States to Protect the Rights of LGBTQI and Gender Diverse Persons (GDP)*
04.29.21
Section 1: Introduction[iv] Within this paper, we analyze three African country contexts—Nigeria, South Africa, and Uganda—in terms of absolute sovereignty exceptions as well as legal obligations of States to protect the rights of LGBTQI and GDP. In Africa, membership to the African Union (AU) could be regarded as one way in which states have agreed […]
More Support is Needed for LGBT Senior Housing
04.28.21
Lisa, a sixty-four year old, Latina Lesbian, has been an advocate and provider of LatinX services at one of San Diego’s leading LGBT organizations for more than three decades. Until recently, Lisa was able to walk to work in the gayborhood of Hillcrest; however, after twenty-five years, her landlord decided to sell the home Lisa […]

The Disparate Impact of COVID-19 Across South Asian American Communities
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. Recognizing the gap between the reality our communities face and existing pandemic-mapping data, SAALT worked to capture the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. The article examines not only Covid-19 infection and fatality rates in South Asian American communities but also […]

Stopping AAPI Hate: Student Reflections on the Public Policy Process
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. This experience reaffirmed the importance of a bottom-up approach to policy formation; we need to collect data on the issues which communities face to find emerging trends, and we need to ask the affected communities what changes they want. “We […]

Nowhere to Go: Anti-Asian Hate Crimes in 1945 and Today
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. Thousands of Japanese Americans faced the same challenges as my grandfather. They faced discriminatory practices established by officials at the highest levels of our government and the lies perpetrated by these officials. Iyekichi Higuchi prepared to leave the Heart Mountain […]

Building Pathways Through Discomfort: Nurturing Allyship in the Asian American Community
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. Though we have expanded access to rights over the last several decades, the fact remains that discomfort—whether driven by outright animus or inadvertent, implicit biases—is at the foundation of the US’s social and political institutions; institutions that were designed from […]

Wealth Inequality Among Asian Americans: The Continuing Significance of Ethnicity and Immigration
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. Much of the work on wealth status to date has focused on comparing Asian Americans to other racial groups using a dichotomy that typically posits Asian Americans and Whites against Latinos and African Americans on the lower end of the […]

Viral Voting: AALDEF Adapts to 2020 and Beyond
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. When combined with other research showing that APAs had the biggest net increase in eligible voters over the last twenty years and the highest recent increase in voter turnout of any racial group (a quadrupling of APA voters from 1.1 […]

Chinese Restaurants: A History of Resilience
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. During their long and often turbulent history in America, Chinese restaurants have always found a way to survive and thrive. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, over 40,000 Chinese restaurants were operating across America. That’s more than all the McDonalds, KFC’s, Wendy’s […]

Tauhi Vā As A Tool For Advocacy In A Time Of Crisis And Transformation
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. Our current work tells us what we have always known — that we have never been in national policy discussions — and we are no longer waiting to ask to be included anymore. Empowering Pacific Islander Communities is a pro-Black, […]

Southeast Asian Americans in 2020: 45 Years of Resilience and Resistance
04.16.21
This piece was published in the 31st print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. This year was a pivotal year for all communities of color. For SEAAs especially, the confluence of our 45th anniversary with a global pandemic, the ongoing fight in support of black lives, and a historic election, we are reminded that […]

The Receipts: Pete Buttigieg’s Policies Fail LGBTQ+ Communities
04.8.21
Though Pete Buttigieg is often cast as an LGBTQ+ icon, his tenure in South Bend and a close look at his platform say otherwise.



