This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services

University of Washington Press

Home University of Washington Press The Concentration Camps and Japanese Economic Losses in California Agriculture, 1900-1942
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

The Concentration Camps and Japanese Economic Losses in California Agriculture, 1900-1942

  • and
© 2013, University of Washington Press

© 2013, University of Washington Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Preface to the Original Edition vii
  4. Preface to the Revised Edition viii
  5. A Note on the Editors and Authors ix
  6. Chronology of Japanese American History xv
  7. PART I Relocation, Redress, and the Report
  8. The Conference Keynote Address: Relocation, Redress, and the Report A Historical Appraisal 1
  9. PART II Prewar Japanese America
  10. Introduction 11
  11. The Uprooting of My Two Communities 15
  12. The Uprooting of Seattle 18
  13. PART III Life in the Camps
  14. Introduction 21
  15. Camp Memories: Rough and Broken Shards 27
  16. An Issei Internee's Experiences 31
  17. My Two Years at Heart Mountain: The Difficult Role of an Applied Anthropologist 33
  18. A Teacher at Topaz 38
  19. The Impact of Incarceration on the Education of Nisei Schoolchildren 44
  20. American Mistreatment of Internees During World War II: Enemy Alien Japanese 52
  21. The Santa Fe Internment Camp and the Justice Department Program for Enemy Aliens 57
  22. The Forced Migrations of West Coast Japanese Americans, 1942-1946: A Quantitative Note 72
  23. PART IV Reactions to the Camps
  24. Introduction 75
  25. Racial Nativism and Origins of Japanese American Relocation 79
  26. Congressional Opinion and War Relocation, 1943 88
  27. Utah's Ambiguous Reception: The Relocated Japanese Americans 92
  28. Forty Years Later: Delta High School Students Look at Topaz 99
  29. Japanese Americans in Idaho 103
  30. Western Reaction to the Relocated Japanese Americans: The Case of Wyoming 112
  31. Seattle's Peace Churches and Relocation 117
  32. "Fellow ... Feelers with the Afflicted": The Christian Churches and the Relocation of the Japanese Ouring World War II 123
  33. PART V Incarceration Elsewhere
  34. Introduction 131
  35. Japanese Internment and Relocation: The Hawaii Experience 135
  36. The Japanese Canadians and World War II 139
  37. The Latin-American Japanese and World War II 142
  38. PART VI Effects of Incarceration Analyzed
  39. Introduction 147
  40. The Effects of the Evacuation on the Japanese Americans 151
  41. Psychological Effects of the Camps on Japanese Americans 159
  42. Evacuation and Economic Loss: Questions and Perspectives 163
  43. The Concentration Camps and Japanese Economic Losses in California Agriculture, 1900-1942 168
  44. Judicial Parsimony and Military Necessity Disinterred: A Reexamination of the Japanese Exclusion Cases, 1943-44 176
  45. PART VII The Redress Movement
  46. Introduction 187
  47. The Japanese American Citizens League and the Struggle for Redress 191
  48. Redress as a Movement T awards Enfranchisement 196
  49. Coram Nobis and Redress 200
  50. With Liberty and Justice for Some: The Case for Compensation to Japanese Americans Imprisoned During World War II 203
  51. PART VIII Negative Reactions to Redress
  52. Letters from John J. McCloy and Karl R. Bendetsen 211
  53. PART IX Redress Achieved
  54. Redress Achieved, 1983 -1990 217
  55. Appendix: Public Law 100-383 225
  56. Supplementary Bibliography 233
  57. Index 235
Japanese Americans
This chapter is in the book Japanese Americans
Downloaded on 23.3.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780295801506-035/html
Scroll to top button