Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Key Terms in Title |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reggie Oh , Frank Wu | The Evolution of Race in The Law: The Supreme Court Moves from Approving Internment of Japanese Americans to Disapproving Affirmative Action for African Americans | 1 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 165 (1996) | Over the past fifty years, the United States Supreme Court has articulated the constitutional standards for the governmental use of racial classifications by referring repeatedly to its wartime decisions on the Japanese American internment. Those decisions were understood then as being emphatically not about race, but have been understood since as... | 1996 | Yes |
Dean Masaru Hashimoto | The Legacy of Korematsu v. United States: A Dangerous Narrative Retold | 4 Asian Pacific American Law Journal 72 (Fall, 1996) | My family never discussed in any detail the internment of my father during World War II until my involvement in the relitigation of Korematsu v. United States as a law student in the summer of 1982. I remember as a child and adolescent possessing a vague understanding that my father had been incarcerated in a camp in the Midwest, but that episode... | 1996 | |
Lawrence Kent Mendenhall | Misters Korematsu and Steffan: The Japanese Internment and The Military's Ban on Gays in The Armed Forces | 70 New York University Law Review 196 (April, 1995) | In Steffan v. Perry, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, sitting en banc, upheld military regulations which stated that [h]omosexuality is incompatible with military service and excluded from the military those persons who engage in homosexual conduct or who, by their statements, demonstrate a propensity to engage in homosexual conduct.... | 1995 | Yes |
Eileen M. Mullen | Rotating Japanese Managers in American Subsidiaries of Japanese Firms: A Challenge for American Employment Discrimination Law | 45 Stanford Law Review 725 (February, 1993) | I. Introduction. 726 II. Allegations of Discrimination in Favor of Japanese Managers. 731 A. Americans Excluded from Decisionmaking. 731 1. Japanese-only meetings. 731 2. Meetings conducted in Japanese. 732 3. Information isolation. 733 4. Business conducted during Japanese-only socializing. 734 B. Titles Without Authority. 734 C. Separate Career... | 1993 | Yes |
Ronald Takaki, Strangers from A Different Shore: A History of Asian Americans, Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1989. Pp. 570 | 8 Chinese (Taiwan) Yearbook of International Law and Affairs 409 (1988-1989) | This book is a vivid overview of Asian American history. Professor Takaki eloquently tells the richly diverse stories of Japanese, Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos, Asian Indians, Vietnamese, Cambodians and Laotians who came to the United States during the past one and a half centuries. In his introduction, Professor Takaki indicates that Asian... | 1989 | ||
Justice at War: The Story of The Japanese American Internment Cases. By Peter Irons. New York: Oxford University Press. 1983. Pp. Xiii, 407. $18.95. | 82 Michigan Law Review 887 (February, 1984) | Peter Irons's, Justice at War adds new evidence to the extensive array of literature attacking the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II and the Supreme Court cases that sanctioned the internment. In Justice at War, Irons focuses on lawyers who could have prevented the internment tragedy - those who had significant connections with... | 1984 | Yes | |
Arval A. Morris | Justice, War, and The Japanese-american Evacuation and Internment. Book Review Of-justice at War: The Story of The Japanese American Internment Cases-by Peter Irons. New York: Oxford University Press, 1983. Pp. Xiii, 407. $18.95. | 59 Washington Law Review 843 (September, 1984) | With all the advantages of hindsight, the shameful episode that saw the militarily ordered exclusion and internment of over 112,000 Japanese Americans during World War II without declaration of martial law looms as one of the greatest mass deprivations of civil liberties by the American government since slavery. This harsh, vast, and discriminatory... | 1984 | Yes |
Howard Ball | Politics over Law in Wartime: The Japanese Exclusion Cases | 19 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 561 (Summer, 1984) | The tragedy that befell American citizens of Japanese descent during World War II is a familiar one. On February 19, 1942, seventy-four days after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 authorizing Secretary of War Henry L. Stimpson to develop military zones from which certain persons would be... | 1984 | Yes |
Eugene V. Rostow | The Japanese American Cases-a Disaster | 54 Yale Law Journal 489 (June, 1945) | He [the King of Great Britain] has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil Power. The Declaration of Independence War is too serious a business to be left to generals. Clemenceau Our war-time treatment of Japanese aliens and citizens of Japanese descent on the West Coast has been hasty, unnecessary and mistaken.... | 1945 | Yes |
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