27 research outputs found
Book review
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/45663/1/11211_2005_Article_BF01048737.pd
Psychosocial Correlates of Self-Reported Coping Among Japanese Americans Interned During World War II
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72679/1/0002-9432.77.2.221.pd
The Japanese American Wartime Incarceration: Examining the Scope of Racial Trauma
Ten weeks after the 1941 Japanese military attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the U.S. government authorized the removal of more than 110,000 Japanese American men, women, and children from their homes in Western portions of the country to incarceration camps in desolate areas of the United States. The mass incarceration was portrayed as necessary to protect the country from potential acts of espionage or sabotage that might be committed by someone of Japanese ancestry. However, an extensive government review initiated in 1980 found no evidence of military necessity to support the removal decision and concluded that the incarceration was a grave injustice fueled by racism and war hysteria. The Japanese American wartime experience represents a powerful case example of race-based historical trauma. This article describes the consequences of the incarceration for Japanese Americans during and after their unjust imprisonment, their coping responses and healing strategies, as well as the impacts of receiving governmental redress more than four decades after the war's end. Examination of this specific event provides a perspective for understanding the long-term, radiating effects of racial trauma and the process of healing, over a broad arc of time and across social contexts. Current relevance of the Japanese American incarceration and implications for the field of psychology are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved)
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Qualitative strategies for ethnocultural research. - Qualitative strategies for ethnocultural research.
Culture has become one of the most important constructs in contemporary psychology, yet when behavioural and social scientists attempt to research ethnocultural communities, they typically rely on wholly quantitative methods, excluding the richness and vitality that numbers alone cannot convey. This volume presents the state-of-the-art discourse on qualitative methods in psychology and community studies. Geared toward multiple audiences, Qualitative Strategies for Ethnocultural Research provides crucial background on the methodological concepts of qualitative approaches to appeal to undergraduate and graduate students being trained in qualitative methods. Yet it includes a wide range of detailed case examples on innovative qualitative approaches to attract researchers in the behavioural and social sciences. Anyone involved in community-level ethnographic research or psychological intervention programs will benefit from this significant and timely work. The chapters in Part I of this edited volume span an array of methodological issues in qualitative research, with particular attention to studies and interventions in ethnocultural communities that have been marginalised. Part II includes chapters that address specific qualitative research applications. Authors from the United States and abroad provide examples of research dilemmas and recommendations for this and the next generation of qualitative researchers
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Perception of Sibling Relationships and Birth Order Among Asian American and European American Emerging Adults
Drawing from an ecological systems framework, we qualitatively explored how Confucian-heritage Asian American emerging adults compared with non-Hispanic European American emerging adults on views of sibling relationships and birth order. Thematic analysis of 48 semi-structured interviews revealed positive sibling relationship themes for both ethnocultural groups: mutual support, companionship, and appreciation; comfort from shared burden of negative parental interactions; and pride in one another. Birth-order themes were also similar across the groups. First-borns overall reported a strong pressure to be a role model to later-borns, provide sibling care, assume family responsibilities, and not expect to rely on younger siblings. Despite these similarities, Asian American first-borns were unique in taking comfort in having siblings who shared a less traditional Asian cultural perspective than their parents. They also described additional pressure from being the oldest within an immigrant family
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Handbook of Multicultural Counseling - Innovative Approaches : Emphasizing Effectiveness and Social Justice for Ethnocultural Populations
Supplementary_Table – Supplemental material for Perception of Sibling Relationships and Birth Order Among Asian American and European American Emerging Adults
<p>Supplemental material, Supplementary_Table for Perception of Sibling Relationships and Birth Order Among Asian American and European American Emerging Adults by Kaidi Wu, Jacqueline H. J. Kim, Donna K. Nagata and Stephanie I. Kim in Journal of Family Issues</p