Social Work Complicity in the Forced Relocation and Incarceration of Japanese Americans
Автор: Council on Social Work Education
Загружено: 2021-05-06
Просмотров: 3439
CSWE Leading Critical Conversations series.
The United States forcibly removed and incarcerated nearly the whole of the nation’s Japanese American population during World War II. Social workers were integral cogs in every aspect of this program of racial profiling en masse. Yoosun Park, PhD, MSW, discusses her scholarship on this topic with Dr. Tanya Smith Brice, CSWE vice president of education. The conversation focuses on the work of the YWCA, whose progressive vision and vocal activism for racial equality was, nevertheless, bound within the fundamentally racist belief that being Japanese and being American were mutually exclusive states. Drs. Park and Smith Brice highlight lessons for today's social workers and social work educators.
Read The Role of the YWCA in the World War II Internment of Japanese Americans: A Cautionary Tale for Social Work at https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi.... Find more of Dr. Park's research at https://scholar.google.com/citations?....
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