Thursday, May 24, 2007

NEW UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA ASIAN AMERICAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDER POLICY RESEARCH PROGRAM ESTABLISHED

"NEW UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA ASIAN AMERICAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDER POLICY RESEARCH PROGRAM ESTABLISHED"

The Office of Research of the University of California has approved the establishment of the UC Asian American and Pacific Islander Policy Multi-Campus Research Program (UC AAPI Policy MRP), which will officially start operating July 1, 2007. The MRP will support and promote applied research on policy issues related to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) in California and the nation. The MRP currently has 50 faculty affiliates from all 10 campuses, representing a diverse range of disciplines, including political science, sociology, economics, ethnic studies, law, public health, nursing, urban planning, education, Asian
American Studies, ethnic studies and social welfare.

The UC AAPI Policy MRP will bring together UC researchers, community-based organizations and legislators to identify, implement and disseminate research related to the AAPI community. The MRP will provide support and training to faculty and their students to conduct policy research, and will sponsor forums for them to present findings to elected officials, policy makers, community leaders and the general public. In doing so, it will enhance the University's broader mission of integrating research, teaching, and community service in ways that enlighten public policy.

The University of California Office of the President will provide funds for core operations for three years. The MRP will be housed at UCLA's Asian American Studies Center, which will provide matching funds and administrative support. UCLA's Graduate Division within the ChancellorĂ­s Office and UCLA's Asian American Studies Department will provide additional support. The Berkeley, Davis, and Irvine campuses will provide matching funds and will sponsor and host annual conferences and workshops to further the MRP's goals.

The founding of the MRP was made possible through the active involvement of faculty from throughout the UC system, with support from the UC Office of the President, California Policy Research Center, UCLA Asian American Studies Center, the UC Center at Sacramento, and the Joint API Legislative Caucus.

Professor Paul Ong (Asian American Studies and School of Public Affairs) will serve as the MRP's faculty director.

Additional information on the UC AAPI Policy MRP can be found at
<http://www.aasc.ucla.edu/policy/default.htm> http://www.aasc.ucla.edu/policy/default.htm .
Please send inquires to aapipolicy@aasc.ucla.edu.

Executive Committee
UC AAPI Policy Initiative
Yen Le Espiritu, Michael Omi, Don T. Nakanishi, Andres Jimenez, and Paul Ong

Saturday, May 19, 2007

CFP: 6th Annual Hawaii International Conference on Arts & Humanities

Call for Papers/Abstracts/Submissions

6th Annual Hawaii International Conference on Arts & Humanities

January 11 - 14, 2008

Waikiki Beach Marriott Resort & Spa, Hilton Waikiki Prince Kuhio

Honolulu Hawaii, USA

Submission Deadline: August 23, 2007

Sponsored by:
University of Louisville - Center for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods
The Baylor Journal of Theatre and Performance

Web address: http://www.hichumanities.org
Email address: humanities@hichumanities.org

The 6th Annual Hawaii International Conference on Arts & Humanities will be held from January 11 (Friday) to January 14 (Monday), 2008 at the Waikiki Beach Marriott Resort & Spa, and the Hilton Waikiki Prince Kuhio, in Honolulu, Hawaii. The conference will provide many opportunities for academicians and professionals from arts and humanities related fields to interact with members inside and outside their own particular disciplines. Cross-disciplinary submissions with other fields are welcome.

Topic Areas (All Areas of Arts & Humanities are Invited):
*Anthropology
*American Studies
*Archeology
*Architecture
*Art
*Art History
*Dance
*English
*Ethnic Studies
*Film
*Folklore
*Geography
*Graphic Design
*History
*Landscape Architecture
*Languages
*Literature
*Linguistics
*Music
*Performing Arts
*Philosophy
*Postcolonial Identities
*Product Design
*Religion
*Second Language Studies
*Speech/Communication
*Theatre
*Visual Arts
*Other Areas of Arts and Humanities
*Cross-disciplinary areas of the above related to each other or other areas.

Submitting a Proposal:
You may now submit your paper/proposal by using our new online submission system! To use the system, and for detailed information about submitting see: http://www.hichumanities.org/cfp_artshumanities.htm

Hawaii International Conference on Arts & Humanities
P.O. Box 75036
Honolulu, HI 96836 USA
Telephone: (808) 542-4385
Fax: (808) 947-2420
E-mail: humanities@hichumanities.org
Website: http://www.hichumanities.org

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Symposium: The State of Middle East Studies

The Middle East Research Group at the Department of Cultural and Social Anthropology at Stanford has organized a one-day symposium on May 17, 2007. With the working title “The State of Middle East Studies: Knowledge Production in an Age of Empire,” this cross-disciplinary event seeks to address current developments in the production of knowledge about the Middle East within the US and transnationally. Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following themes: power/knowledge and the political economy of the academy; the production and reproduction of gendered nationalist discourses in/about the Middle East; governmental and nongovernmental funding for Middle East Studies programs; the production of “expertise” and the role of experts as apparatus of governmentality; historical continuities and nuances in discourses of national security, terror and war.

Please see the website for more information and if possible, distribute to your lists and post on your websites.
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/anthroCASA/tsmes.html

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Conference: SE Asian Americans

Conference on Southeast Asian Americans to be held at Carleton, May 12.

Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, is pleased to host the Conference on Southeast Asian Americans on May 12, 2007. Featuring multi-disciplinary research presentations by undergraduate students on the Hmong, Vietnamese, and Cambodian experience in America, this conference is the first of its kind. The student speakers will represent several Minnesota and Wisconsin schools, including Carleton, Saint Olaf, Macalester, University of Minnesota- Twin Cities, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In addition, students are coming from several west and east coast universities to present their research, including Stanford, the University of California-Los Angeles, University of California-Irvine, University of California-Santa Cruz, and University of Massachusetts- Boston.

For a list of paper titles and panels see the
conference website:
http://apps.carleton.edu/curricular/posc/Conf_SE_Asian_Amer/

Three prominent scholars in Hmong studies will offer commentary on the student papers: including Professor Yang Dao, Professor Gary Yia Lee, and Professor Kou Yang. The keynote speakers are: Professor Mai Na Lee, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, and Ms. Hai Binh Nguyen, Asian Pacific Environmental Network in Oakland, California.

In addition, Penh Lo of Minnesota State University at Mankato will deliver a talk on ethnic minority groups in Laos during lunch time (Great Hall, Severance Hall). The Honorable Mee Moua, Minnesota State Senator will give a dinner lecture at 6 p.m. (Great Hall, Severance hall) All events are free and open to the public (excluding meals, which are open to the public but require advance reservation and payment in advance or at the door). Conferences sessions will be held in Leighton Hall from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on May 12, Saturday.

There will be a special evening performance by Tou Ger Xiong (Carleton B.A., 1996), rapper and comedian, in Concert Hall from 8-10 p.m. The band Watching Leona will perform after the Tou Ger Xiong performance.

For more information and to register, contact Carolyn Wong at cwong@carleton.edu or 507-646-4680.
Carleton College
One North College St.
Northfield MN 55057

Friday, May 11, 2007

CNN Special Report: Uncovering America: The Asian American Journey

n celebration of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, CNN is conducting a special report entitled "Uncovering America: The Asian American Journey". There will be multiple broadcasts between Saturday, May 12 thru Wednesday, May 16th on a range of different topics with CNN mainstays such as Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta.

Additionally, the following website has a number of different articles, galleries, and slideshows dedicated to Asian Americans:

http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2007/asian.american/

Task Force releases largest-ever national survey of API LGBT Americans

http://www.thetaskforce.org/press/releases/prAPI_051007

Task Force releases largest-ever national survey of Asian and Pacific Islander lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans

May 10, 2007

MEDIA CONTACT:
Roberta Sklar, Director of Communications
media@theTaskForce.org
646.358.1465
Study reveals disturbingly high rates of discrimination and harassment Hate violence and harassment, media representation, marriage equality and immigration found to be most important issues facing community Download the report and related fact sheets at
http://www.thetaskforce.org/reports_and_research/api_study

"When hate violence and harassment are cited as the community’s top concern and nearly one in five survey respondents has experienced physical harassment for being either Asian/Pacific Islander or lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, it underscores the need for Congress to pass and the president to sign federal hate crimes legislation."-- Matt Foreman, Executive Director, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force


WASHINGTON, May 10 -- The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Policy Institute today released a historic study, Living in the Margins: A National Survey of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Asian and Pacific Islander Americans, based on data from the largest-ever national survey of Asian and Pacific Islander (API) lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Americans. Among the disturbing findings: 75 percent of respondents reported experiencing discrimination and/or harassment based on their sexual orientation and 85 percent reported experiencing discrimination and/or harassment based on their race or ethnicity.

"The lives of Asians and Pacific Islanders are complex, and they are made invisible by popular perceptions of our community as ‘the model minority.’ This report helps shatter those myths and raises important issues from which we as a community can and need to mobilize," said Mala Nagarajan of Trikone-Northwest in Seattle, Wash.

"When hate violence and harassment are cited as the community’s top concern and nearly one in five survey respondents has experienced physical harassment for being either Asian/Pacific Islander or lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, it underscores the need for Congress to pass and the president to sign federal hate crimes legislation,
" said Matt Foreman, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.

Living in the Margins is based on analysis of survey data from 863 respondents who live in a total of 38 states and the District of Columbia in a pattern that closely reflects the distribution of Asians and Pacific Islanders in the United States. This online survey was conducted from June through September 2006 in English, Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese. It included a variety of questions focusing on basic demographic information, experiences of discrimination and/or harassment, policy priorities and political behavior. Respondents were recruited through invitations on listservs and Web sites created by API LGBT community organizations in New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle and Honolulu. Special
appeals were also made to increase participation from traditionally underrepresented groups, including South Asians, Pacific Islanders, Koreans, women, transgender people and elders.

"As the Asian and Pacific Islander community grows in size and clout, we cannot leave behind Asians and Pacific Islanders who are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender. We are a part of both the API and LGBT communities and we raise our voices for inclusion in national debates around comprehensive and compassionate immigration reform, punitive bans on marriage and hate violence that tears our community apart. We are silent at our own peril," said Doreena Wong, co-chair of API Equality--Los Angeles.

"Asian and Pacific Islander LGBT community members report pervasive harassment in the form of homophobia in the API community and racism in the LGBT community. They are concerned with comprehensive and compassionate immigration reform, how they are portrayed in the media, and protecting their families and themselves from violence and harassment," said Alain Dang, a Task Force policy analyst and the study’s lead author. "These findings add to the growing body of evidence that support the need for not only legislative intervention, but community introspection.
"

Key findings of the report include:

* Nearly every respondent (98 percent) had experienced at least one form of discrimination and/or harassment in their lives: 75 percent reported that they had experienced discrimination and/or harassment based on their sexual orientation and 85 percent reported experiencing discrimination and/or harassment based on their race or ethnicity.
* The most important issues facing API LGBT Americans are hate violence/harassment
, media representation, marriage equality and immigration.
* Nearly all respondents (89 percent) agreed that homophobia and/or transphobia are problems within the broader API community. In addition, 78 percent agreed that API LGBT people experience racism within the predominantly white LGBT community.
* API LGBT Americans are very politically active, with 67 percent reporting that they planned to vote in the 2006 midterm election. Approximately 20 percent reported that they were ineligible to vote. Strong majorities of respondents also reported that they participate in other political activities, including signing petitions, participating in marches or rallies and contacting their elected officials.
* Only 50 percent of respondents said that English was their native language. Mandarin (11 percent), Cantonese (8 percent), Tagalog (6 percent) and Vietnamese (5 percent) were the most frequently cited native languages. Nearly all LGBT informational and advocacy materials are produced in English. Few resources are printed in any Asian language.

Demographics of respondents:

* More than a dozen ethnicities were represented in the sample, including Chinese (40 percent), Filipino (19 percent), Japanese (11 percent) and Asian Indian (10 percent). Smaller numbers of Vietnamese, Korean, Hawaiian, Malaysian, Thai and Pakistani respondents also participated. These ethnic groups are Asian and Pacific Islander Americans, a term that encompasses a vast collection of ethnic groups with unique histories, cultures and migrations within both their Asian or Pacific Island ancestral country of origin and the United States.
* Fifty-three percent of the participants identified as men, 41 percent as women and 10 percent as transgender. This adds up to more than 100 percent because respondents could select more than one option.
* Forty-seven percent of respondents self-identified as gay, 19 percent as lesbian and 9 percent as bisexual. Twenty percent identified as "queer," with women more than twice as likely as men to choose that label. Five percent chose various other labels.
* One-third of respondents reported being in a committed relationship and 10 percent reported having a domestic partner.

Living in the Margins: A National Survey of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Asian and Pacific Islander Americans was released today in Los Angeles at a press conference at the Asian Pacific American Legal Center.

"This report would not have been possible without the dedicated effort of local organizations across the country participating and encouraging underrepresented voices to be heard," said Dang. "Living in the Margins continues the Task Force’s longstanding commitment to racial and economic justice and supports the efforts of local activists in a partnership to create a strong, vibrant, diverse LGBT community where all are welcomed and supported."

A copy of the report and related fact sheets can be downloaded at
www.theTaskForce.
org/reports_and_research/api_study.

Various materials available in Chinese, English, Hindi, Korean and Vietnamese.

--30--

The mission of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force is to build the political power of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) ommunity from the ground up. We do this by training activists, organizing broad-based campaigns to defeat anti-LGBT referenda and advance pro-LGBT legislation, and by building the organizational capacity of our movement. Our Policy Institute, the movement’s premier think tank, provides research and policy analysis to support the struggle for complete equality and to counter right-wing lies. As part of a broader social justice movement, we work to create a nation that respects the diversity of human expression and identity and creates opportunity for all. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., we also have offices in New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis and Cambridge.

http://www.thetaskforce.org/press/releases/prAPI_051007

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Talk: Philip Kan Gotanda

Asian American Studies invites you to a talk...

“After the War: A Case Study of the Making of Theatre Art”

Philip Kan Gotanda
Thursday, May 10, 2007
6:00 -8:00 pm
1150 Hart Hall

One of the nation’s leading playwrights, Philip Kan Gotanda, has been a major influence in the broadening of our definition of theatre in America. Through his plays and advocacy, he has been instrumental in bringing stories of Asians in the United States to mainstream American theater as well as to Europe and Asia.

We thank our co-sponsors: Davis Humanities Institute Asian Pacific American Cultural Politics Research Group, English Department, Theatre and Dance Department, Davis Humanities Institute Research Group in Performance and Practice, and the Asian American Studies Graduate Student Group.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Townhall discucssion: People of Color and Allies


Name: Emergency People of Color & Allies Town Hall Meeting!!!
Tagline: Because we don't feel safe on our campus!!!
Host: The Community of Color @ UCD

Date: Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Time: 8:00pm - 11:00pm
Location: TBD- King Lounge??

Description:
Do you feel safe on our campus (UCD)???
Do you feel that UCD can take measures to make us, as PEOPLE OF COLOR feel
safer and voiced on campus?
Come and debrief, discuss and dialogue about the current situation on our
Campus with regards to such Campus Groups like DCR and AGR. Come and see
how we can localize and vocalize our concerns!

Talk and Film Screening: Imagining the City

CHSC, Center for History, Society and Culture UC Davis
Colloquium Series: On Democracies Spring, 2007

Co-sponsors:
Middle East/South Asia Studies, Cultural Studies, Film Studies

Anjali Monteiro and K.P. Jayasankar *
Centre for Media and Cultural Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai

"Imagining the City"

Tuesday, May 8
4:00 p.m.,
Andrews Conference Room, 2203 Social Science and Humanities Building

* Anjali Monteiro is Professor, and K.P. Jayasankar is Professor and Chair, at the Centre for
Media and Cultural Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. Both are involved in
media production, teaching and research. Their work has been screened extensively at film festivals
all over the world. They have won thirteen national and international awards for their films which
include: the Prix Futura Berlin 1995 Asia Prize for “Identity- The Construction of Selfhood”, a
Special Mention of the Jury at MIFF `96 for “Kahankar: Ahankar”, the Certificate of Merit at MIFF
`98 and Best Innovation, Astra Film Festival 1998, Sibiu, Romania for YCP 1997 and the Best
documentary award at the IV Three Continents International Festival of Documentaries 2005,
Venezuela, for “SheWrite”. Monteiro and Jayasankar have authored several papers in the area of
media and cultural studies and have contributed to scholarly journals such as Cultural Studies.
They are both actively involved in ‘Vikalp’ and ‘Films for Freedom’, which are collectives of
documentary filmmakers campaigning for freedom of expression.
NAATA

The Bond

English, 2003, 45 Mins.

Directed by K.P. Jayasankar and Anjali Monteiro
Naata is about Bhau Korde and Waqar Khan, two activists and friends, who have been involved in conflict resolution, working with neighbourhood peace committees in Dharavi, Mumbai, reputedly, the largest 'slum' in Asia. This film explores their work, which has included the collective production and use of visual media for ethnic amity. Waqar and Bhau's work raises several uncomfortable questions for the filmmakers, so-called modern, middle-class, secular, urban beings. Naata juxtaposes the multi-layered narrative on Dharavi and the 'stories' of the filmmakers, thereby attempting to foreground a critical and active viewership.

Monday, May 7, 2007

Activism Training 5/25-27

*please forward widely*

Do you want to...

.Learn how to effectively organize in your community?
.Network with non-profit Asian American Community Organizations?
.Meet student activists from all over the Bay Area?
.Spend three days with complete accommodations in Oakland for FREE?

Then come to the Asian American Community Training (A.C.T.)!!!!

When: May 25-27, 2007
Where: Center for Third World Organizing Retreat Center, Oakland
Application Deadline: April 30th, 2007

A weekend built upon the mission of a coalition of college students from UC Berkeley and Stanford University to promote social justice and activism within the Asian American community in the Bay Area.

For more detailed information please look at the attached letter and ACT application or email actapps@gmail.com . You can also check out our website at http://actcommunity.googlepages.com/ .

First multi-ethnic history of immigration into the American West

Indiana University Press is pleased to announce the recent publication of:

FROM ALL POINTS:

America's Immigrant West, 1870s-1952

By Elliott Robert Barkan

"This richly detailed history of immigrants in the 20th-century American West rewards the reader with close attention to individual voices of immigrants." ­Walter Nugent, author of Into the West: The Story of Its People

By the end of the 20th century the American West was home to nearly half of America's immigrant population, including Asians and Armenians, Germans and Greeks, Mexicans, Italians, Swedes, Basques, and others. Covering nine decades of Western American history and the experiences of over twenty ethnic groups, this magisterial book tells their rich and complex story ­ of adaptation and isolation, maintaining and mixing traditions, and an ongoing ebb and flow of movement, assimilation, and replenishment.

<http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=41652>http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=41652

American West in the Twentieth Century
624 pages, 50 black & white photos
ISBN-978-0-253-

34851-7, cloth $39.95

Indiana University Press
601 N. Morton St., Bloomington, IN 47404 U.S.A.
812-855-8287 (tele)
812-856-0415 (fax )
http://upress.indiana.edu

Call for Submissions - Hmong Studies Journal Volume 8 - May 30, 2007

The deadline for submissions for the next issue of the Hmong Studies Journal (Volume 8) is coming up. Please help us pass along the word to those who might be interested.

http://www.hmongstudies.com/HSJCFP2007volume8.html

Yours Sincerely,
Mark Pfeifer, Editor, Hmong Studies Journal

Conference CFP: South Korea's Education Exodus

CALL FOR PAPERS

SOUTH KOREA'S EDUCATION EXODUS (CHOGI YUHAK): RISKS, REALITIES, AND CHALLENGES
A Working Conference at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
MARCH 28-29, 2008

The Asian American Studies Program and the Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign are pleased to announce an upcoming conference to take place on March 28-29, 2008 on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

South Korean "early study abroad" students - namely those young people who exit South Korea for study prior to college - are literally changing the face of Korean diasporic communities across the U.S. and other English-speaking nations. Early study abroad is a rapidly escalating market in South Korea: a $550 million industry in the first quarter of 2004, doubling the 2002 figures. Remarkably, a recent South Korean survey revealed that if given the opportunity, 1 out of 4 parents would like to emigrate for their children's education. The conference will ask large questions about South Korea's particular globalization embrace, cosmopolitan desires, and education system; and about the changing face and social reality of Korean America with the arrival of these new immigrants. In doing so, the conference will take up both the macro-level context and consequences and the U.S. realities of this growing "immigrant" population.

We invite graduate students and faculty with sustained and substantive research programs on this topic to submit an abstract.

PLEASE SUBMIT:
(1) A 1-page abstract of the proposed 25-35 page paper (Please note: The conference paper will be due by February 15, 2008)
(2) A short cover letter that indicates the status of the research outlined in the abstract (e.g., has the empirical research been completed? Is this paper part of a larger dissertation and/or book project?)
(3) A 1-2 paragraph biography: indicate institutional affiliations, research interests, publications (if relevant), and work in progress

Email submission (i.e., with attachments) is welcome to: Viveka Kudaligama, Assistant Director of the Asian American Studies Program (kudaliga@uiuc.edu). We also welcome print submission to: Asian American Studies Program, 1208 W. Nevada, Urbana, IL 61801.

Deadline: July 15, 2007

Scholars whose papers are accepted to present will receive travel funding (up to $400) as well as room and board to participate in the conference.

The papers presented and discussed at the conference will become the basis of an important edited volume. The volume will be of interest to those with interests in international education, immigration, globalization, and to the many K-16 American educators and social service workers whose lives have been personally touched by the considerable needs of this large population of South Korean children and split households.

For further information, please go to
www.aasp.uiuc. edu/EducationExodus/index.html or contact any member of
the conference organizing committee.

Conference Organizing Committee
Nancy Abelmann (nabelman@uiuc.edu)
Anthropology, Asian American Studies, East Asian Languages & Cultures
Soo Ah Kwon (sakwon@uiuc.edu)
Asian American Studies, Human and Community Development
Adrienne Lo (adrienlo@uiuc.edu)
Educational Psychology
Sumie Okazaki (okazaki@uiuc.edu)
Psychology

BACKGROUND AND CONFERENCE FOCUS
In recent years South Korean families have been sending their pre-college aged children abroad for education at remarkable rates, making for a veritable education exodus of the middle class. These so-called "early study abroad students" (chogi yuhaksaeng), many of whom come alone and others with one of their parents (most often their mothers), are a prominent demographic phenomena in Chicagoland, Urbana-Champaign and the University of Illinois. For example, some high schools in the northern suburbs of Chicago (with large concentrations of Korean immigrants generally) have a large number of these students in their ESL programs. In Urbana-Champaign, many academic families host or are parents to these students, making them the largest international population in private schools in the area. At the University of Illinois among the over 1000 Korean American undergraduates, over 200 of them are such students, having come alone or with a single parent in middle or high school. Further, university officers nationwide are baffled by what has been called the "drop and run" pattern of Korean visiting scholar and graduate student men who drop their families in the U.S. and run back (to jobs) in South Korea. Ubiquitous are so-called "geese families" (kirogi kajok) in which the father stays behind in South Korea to support his wife and children abroad. Not surprisingly, there are currently at least 6 in-progress dissertations at the University of Illinois alone on these children and families in the community.

This local reality is one replicated in every major U.S. city and university town. Early study abroad is a rapidly escalating market in South Korea: a $550 million industry in the first quarter of 2004, doubling the 2002 figures. Remarkably, a recent national survey revealed that "if given the opportunity, one out of four parents would like to emigrate for their children's education." Not surprisingly then, 80% of elementary students in South Korea are enrolled in some form of after-school private English education.

This "early study abroad" prompts a number of important questions:
* Why do the middle class citizens of an economically prosperous and democratic society desire and decide to support the education exodus of their children at such a remarkable rate?
* What can this teach us about new forms of and desires for global citizenship?
* What are the personal, familial, educational, and societal contours and costs of this sort of education exodus?
* What challenge does this exodus pose to the young people who are living this trend?
* How can American educators and service professionals best meet the needs of South Korea's early study abroad children?

Education emigration is not new; families have sought better opportunities for their children for a very long time. Nor is the early study abroad of the very rich new (e.g., Hong Kong's so-called parachute kids). Nor are split-household transnational families in which women or men migrate to support children back home new. What is remarkable in the South Korean case, however, is the widespread extent of middle class participation in this transnational strategy. While the phenomenon of "brain drain" has been studied with regard to the migration of the elite, when middle class families participate in this education emigration and family reorganization, the personal, marital, and familial costs are significant: middle and high school-aged children live in boarding houses, with relatives, or even alone; parents often become functionally and in some cases legally divorced; and families are taxed financially.

What drives this exodus? We suggest that this phenomenon reflects a complex confluence of a multitude of factors, namely: the mobility desires of a Korean middle class jockeying for global citizenship and the advantages it confers; the waning faith in the economic and social future of citizens whose lives remain "domestic"; the
rejection of South Korea's excellent but highly competitive schooling; and finally the global citizenship project of parents (foremost of the mothers who accompany their children abroad). Relevant to this exodus are: South Korea's aggressive globalization, a shared project of the state and citizenry, beginning in the 1990s
with the earliest democratic presidencies (democratic elections began in 1988); the faltering of the middle classes in the aftermath of the so-called IMF (or Asian Debt) Crisis in which South Korea became the largest IMF bail-out in history; and the aggressive neoliberalization of the South Korean economy in response to the IMF Crisis. All of this said, however, observers remain somewhat perplexed by the
extent, costs, and risks of this phenomenon.

This conference will take up the both the macro-level context and consequences and the U.S. realities of this growing "immigrant" population. The conference will both ask large questions about South Korea's particular globalization embrace, cosmopolitan desires, and education system; and about the changing face and social reality of Korean America with the arrival of these new immigrants. We argue that these are the critical contexts for burgeoning research on the lives and predicaments of the many split households in the United States, and of the many children here alone.

In addition to more conventional academic sessions, the conference will also host an Educational Practice and Policy session targeted to local and Chicago educators and service professionals whose institutions have been impacted by the considerable needs of this large population of South Korean children and split households.

BOOK CFP: Asian Americans and the New South

Call for Papers

Asian Americans and the New South (University of Georgia Press)

Edited by

Khyati Y. Joshi and Jigna Desai

Description

The American South has a rich and vibrant tapestry of longstanding Asian American communities as well as exponentially growing recent ones. In addition to the historical presence of Asian Americans for the last two centuries (e.g., Chinese Americans in Mississippi and Filipino Americans in New Orleans), geographically diverse areas including Atlanta, the Research Triangle (Chapel Hill, Raleigh -Durham), New Orleans, Orlando and Nashville, have also become sites of recent immigration and internal migration. In an attempt to recognize and reckon with these historical and emerging minority communities, scholarly fields are beginning to map these unique histories, new communities, and the South's changing racial formations. This interdisciplinary anthology seeks to bring together essays that touch upon a wide-ranging number of topics that reflect the breadth and depth of the Asian American presence in the South. Historical perspectives on Asian Americans in the South. Contributions will be sought for an anthology exploring the historical, political, cultural, social, and/or economic issues associated with Asian Americans in the South. We would be interested in manuscripts that examine any of the following:

* Historical Perspectives on Asian Americans in the American South
* AA Religious Communities
* Past and emerging AA racial formations
* The South as regional and transnational crossroads
* Interethnic and panethnic relations among Asian Americans
* Multiracial and interracial relations
* Katrina and its consequences

* Education
* Social movements in the South
* Labor, class and social organizing
* Internal migration or transnationalism
* Public health, illness and/or the body
* Gender & Sexuality
* Policies, politics, and/or politicians in Asian American communities
* The impact of organizing around current immigration policies
* Past and emerging AA racial formations
* Second and third generation identities

Timetable:
Abstracts Due: 06.01.07
Final Drafts Due: 11.15.07
Manuscript Length: 6000-8000 words

For more information contact:
Khyati Y. Joshi, Assistant Professor, School of Education, Fairleigh Dickinson University * khyati@fdu.edu
Jigna Desai, Associate Professor, Women's Studies & Director, Asian American Studies Program, University of Minnesota * desai003@umn.edu

Graduate Writing Fellows resource

UWP Introduces: Graduate Writing Fellows

All graduate students at UC Davis are invited to schedule an appointment with a peer-writing fellow, a graduate student who is trained to coach writing projects across the disciplines. Students are encouraged to make 30-minute to one-hour appointments at any stage of the writing process. Bring questions, doodles, or drafts.

At the beginning of the session, your fellow will ask questions about what you're working on so that the session will be driven by your goals and concerns.

You can work will your fellow on generating and focusing a topic, organizing and clarifying ideas, enhancing persuasiveness, adapting your style for a specific audience or publication, and overall strengthening
your writing skills. Your writing fellow will not edit your work for grammatical errors, but will help you to improve your writing style.

To make an appointment contact: writingfellows@ucdavis.edu

Call for Submissions: The Encyclopedia of Asian American Popular Culture

THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ASIAN AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE

The 2-volume, illustrated Encyclopedia of Asian American Popular Culture is scheduled to be published by Greenwood Press in 2008. Editor Felicia Campbell seeks writers for remaining unassigned entries.

Candidates must be willing to write entries totaling at least 2000 words. Preference will be given to college professors, published writers, and advanced graduate students, but others qualified to write about Asian American Popular Culture will be considered. Deadline for submissions is 8/31/07. The deadline is firm, so please do not respond to this call unless you are confident that you can complete one entry of 2000 words or a group of entries totaling that number by that date.

If you are interested in writing for this important reference, please send a short biographical sketch describing your background and interests in Asian American Popular Culture and your preferred e-mail and postal address to:

Encyclopedia Editor: felicia.campbell@unlv.edu

Qualified candidates will receive a listing of available entries. Contributors may also suggest entries not on the list. Prospective contributors will receive an assignment, contributors' guidelines, and sample entries by e-mail followed by a release form postal mailed from the publisher to be signed and returned. Completed entries are subject to the normal editing process required for quality publications and are accepted for publication at the discretion of the editor, advisory board, and publisher.

Conference: Vietnamese American Summit VANG 2007

Houston, TX
18 May 2007

http://www.vangusa.org/m_summit.php