Financial Aid for Asian Americans, 1997-1999

Financial Aid for Asian Americans, 1997-1999
Author: Gail A. Schlachter
Publisher:
Total Pages: 400
Release: 1997-05
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780918276575

This is the source to use if you are looking for financial aid for Asian Americans. Described here are more than 1,500 funding opportunities open to Chinese Americans, Japanese Americans, Korean Americans, Vietnamese Americans, Filipinos, and other Americans of Asian ancestry. Each program entry gives you everything you need to tell if a program is right for you: contact information (including fax, e-mail, and toll-free numbers), purpose, eligibility, financial data, duration, special features, limitations, number awarded, and deadline date. Plus, there's an annotated bibliography of other important directories and a set of six indexes. Issued as part of the Minority Funding Set (see page 4), this directory can be purchased separately or as part of the set.

Contemporary Asian American Communities

Contemporary Asian American Communities
Author: Linda Trinh Võ
Publisher: Temple University Press
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2009
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781439901243

Once thought of in terms of geographically bounded spaces, Asian America has undergone profound changes as a result of post-1965 immigration as well as the growth and reshaping of established communities. This collection of original essays demonstrates that conventional notions of community, of ethnic enclaves determined by exclusion and ghettoization, now have limited use in explaining the dynamic processes of contemporary community formation.Writing from a variety of perspectives, these contributors expand the concept of community to include sites not necessarily bounded by space; formations around gender, class, sexuality, and generation reveal new processes as well as the demographic diversity of today's Asian American population. The case studies gathered here speak to the fluidity of these communities and to the need for new analytic approaches to account for the similarities and differences between them. Taken together, these essays forcefully argue that it is time to replace the outworn concept of a monolithic Asian America.