INTERNMENT of Japanese Americans, 1942-1945INTERGENERATIONAL relationsPSYCHOLOGICAL distressJAPANESE American familiesCHILDREN of immigrantsGROUP identitySOCIOCULTURAL factorsPSYCHOLOGYTWENTIETH centuryDuring World War II, the United States confined 120,000 Japanese Americans in incarceration camps based solely on ...
location), there was no mass evacuation of Hawaiian Japanese. To control for fixed differences in labor market outcomes between West Coast and Hawaiian Japanese, I incorporate birth cohorts whose labor market experience was unaffected by internment. Moreover, I test the identifying assumption unde...
InJapanese Americans: From Relocation to Redress. Roger Daniels, Sandra C. Taylor, and Harry H. L. Kitano (eds.). Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. Google Scholar Nagata, Donna K. (1989). Long-term Effects of the Japanese American Internment Camps: Impact Upon the Children of ...
Internment was presumably a precaution against the actions of any potentially disloyal Japanese near the Pacific. As a result, Japanese Americans living along the West Coast and portions of Arizona were ordered to leave their homes and move to concentration camps in desolate areas of the interior....
(1989). Long-term effects of the Japanese-American internment camps: Impact upon the children of the internees. Journal of the Asian American Psychological Association, 13(1), 48-54.Nagata, D. K. (1989). Long-term effects of the Japanese American internment camps: Impact upon the ...