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Breaking Down Barriers: Legal and Political Advocacy for AAPI Communities

10.5.20

INTERVIEW WITH JOHN YANG This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. I’m proud of the fact that in some ways my own background is a microcosm of the complexity of the Asian American experience. AAPR: Can you briefly introduce yourself and your organization? YANG: My name is […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Movement-Building, Asian Americans, and the Struggle for Racial Justice

10.5.20

INTERVIEW WITH MEGAN MING FRANCIS This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. The problems that impact Black people are the same structures that also oppress Asian Americans. This whole pact that certain Asian Americans believe will set them free, that this proximity and getting closer to Whiteness and by […]

Why I Serve

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. I learned that I no longer have to feel inadequate and try to emulate an undefinable, but distinct idea of what American is. As long as we share the same common values, we are all Americans and all of our […]

When I Grow Up, I Want to Become a Better Daughter

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. But perhaps all of this – the frustration, the seemingly endless seeking of answers to the “missing link” in my communication with my mother, the continuous and unintentional use of counseling skills in conversation with my mother – could be […]

Reclaim Our Power: Principles for Utility Justice in California

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. As artists and activists whose families have been impacted by the California wildfires and Pacific Gas and Electric’s utility shut- offs, we are inspired by the recently launched “Reclaim Our Power!” utility justice campaign led by Asian Pacific Environmental Network (APEN), […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Leading from the Margins: Immigrant and Refugee Leadership for a Green New Deal

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. A transformative Green New Deal needs to answer important questions about who benefits from this new economy, who controls it, and who has been left out in the past. The Deal has to be about restoration, repair, and balance. And […]

A History of Asian American, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander Health Policy Advocacy: From Invisibility to Forging Policy

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. AAs and NHPIs are 23 million and rising and yet federal policy resources fail to reach our communities. Less than 0.17% of efforts funded by NIH include AA and NHPI participants. In 1985, the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare […]

Public Charge: An Injustice and Its Chilling Effects on AAPI and Low-Income Communities

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. Despite the “model minority” myth attached to AAPIs, an estimated 3.8 million AAPIs live in families that have at least one family member receiving public benefits. Asian American Pacific Islanders (AAPI) have long been a part of the fabric of […]

Collaborations to Prevent “Researching While Asian” From Going Viral

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. More and more botched individual cases have captured the public’s outcry and fueled growing concerns about whether Asian Americans are being unfairly targeted and accused of economic espionage, regardless of US citizenship status. The Rising Tide of Accusations and Fear […]

Gender, Race and Identity

The Future of Work Must Include Asian American and Pacific Islanders: Harnessing the Power of the Fastest-Growing Working-Age Population in the Labor Movement

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. The rich history of AANHPI workers in the labor movement should be recognized for its contributions to a fairer and more advanced labor movement. I.         INTRODUCTION Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) workers have been embedded in the […]

Gender, Race and Identity

Legacy of Harm: The Path from Patriarchy to Intimate Partner Violence

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. Language operates in inclusionary and exclusionary ways. Definitions that hinge liability or guilt on physical violence alone operate to exclude the lived experience of domestic violence victims who have suffered no or minimal physical abuse, but have lived in a […]

Gender, Race and Identity

TIGER: A Sustainable Model for Building LGBTQ AAPI Community

10.5.20

This piece was published in the 30th print volume of the Asian American Policy Review. The LGBTQ AAPI community is often overlooked and their needs marginalized. LGBTQ AAPIs still suffer from invisibility, isolation, and stereotyping. Introduction Since the Harvard Kennedy School’s Asian American Policy Review was first published, the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer […]

Gender, Race and Identity

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