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Race, Rights, Reparation: Law and the Japanese American Internment, 2nd Edition / Edition 2
Barnes and Noble
Race, Rights, Reparation: Law and the Japanese American Internment, 2nd Edition / Edition 2
Current price: $142.00
Barnes and Noble
Race, Rights, Reparation: Law and the Japanese American Internment, 2nd Edition / Edition 2
Current price: $142.00
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Race, Rights and Reparation: Law and the Japanese American Internment
is the first comprehensive course book that provides critical examination of the Asian-American legal experience, and the legal, social and ethical ramifications of the internment of Japanese- Americans during World War II and the successful reparations movement of the 1980s. Appropriate for a diverse set of law school and non-legal courses, it'supplements carefully contextualized case law and social policies with dramatic oral histories, essays, commentary and photographs sure to stimulate class discussion.
The
Second Edition
represents a substantial revision of the original course book. Several new chapters expressly link the Japanese-American internment cases and redress to the civil liberties and national security issues raised post-9/11, making Asian-American legal history even more relevant to significant contemporary controversies. Other key updates to first edition material include an even more comprehensive Overview Chapter and the addition of recent scholarly and judicial treatment of the World War II and
coram nobis
internment cases.
Features:
The only course book that covers Asian-American legal history
and reparations.
Accessible, multidisciplinary approach
appeals to scholars, students and instructors of
ethnic studies, history, sociology, as well as law and legal studies.
Contextualizes internment and reparations
to facilitate understanding of
what happened and why,
including an
overview chapter with key details
and timelines.
Examines how social policy and politics
both
enabled and constrained legal decisions
by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Discusses "headline" topics, such as redress
for governmental misconduct and the
national security implications
of the Japanese-American experience.
Provocative oral histories, litigation documents, photographs, essays and commentary
that enrich
class discussion
of judicial decisions.
Flexible, modular organization
accommodates the
focus and interests of different courses
and instructors.
Authors' website
provides updates and additional information.
The Second Edition has been substantially revised with new chapters and updated material, including:
An even more comprehensive overview chapter
covering the text's larger themes and significant legal specifics.
Completely new chapters
replace old ones to
expressly link the internment cases and Japanese-American redress to post-9/11 national security/civil liberties issues
and to
U.S. and International Reparations/Reconciliation.