This article consists of the text of a speech delivered by Dr. Bruce T. Downing as the closing keynote speech at the Hmong Across Borders conference at the University of Minnesota in October 2013. The speech discusses how the author became involved in Hmong Studies and how the University of Minnesota came to take on an important role in Hmong Studies research in the early 1980s. The author also discusses his involvement in early Hmong refugee resettlement efforts in the U.S. and how the landscape of Hmong Studies has changed over the past several decades
When the United States pulled out of Southeast Asia following the Vietnam War, they left behind an e...
Interview with Dr. Fungchatou Lo discussing Hmong culture and experiences with Hmong refugee resettl...
The Hmong are an ethnic hill tribe group originally from Southern China with concentrated population...
This short article presents brief information about the funders, institutions and funders that made ...
Text of the Welcoming comments made by Dr. Yang Dao to attendees at the Hmong Across Borders Confere...
The Hmong are a transnational ethnic people, because of their dispersal from China into Southeast As...
This article summarizes a roundtable discussion of scholars that took place at the Association for A...
The Hmong people are a culture that originated in Southern China. However, many Hmong people fled to...
Page 55-56Review of Burt, S.M., and Ratliff, M., The Hmong language in Wisconsin: Language Shift and...
In the late 1970s the aftermath of the Vietnam War brought displaced Hmong refugees (along with othe...
Despite being a relatively new refugee group relocating to the United States during the 1970s and 19...
Review of: Hmong America: Reconstructing Community in Diaspora, by Chia Youyee Vang
Living as refugees in the United States, the Hmong are struggling to adapt to a new culture. The you...
Prepared by the Center for Urban and Regional Affairs, Southeast Asian Refugee Studies Project, Univ...
As the changing demographics in the United States are steadily shifting the student populations in c...
When the United States pulled out of Southeast Asia following the Vietnam War, they left behind an e...
Interview with Dr. Fungchatou Lo discussing Hmong culture and experiences with Hmong refugee resettl...
The Hmong are an ethnic hill tribe group originally from Southern China with concentrated population...
This short article presents brief information about the funders, institutions and funders that made ...
Text of the Welcoming comments made by Dr. Yang Dao to attendees at the Hmong Across Borders Confere...
The Hmong are a transnational ethnic people, because of their dispersal from China into Southeast As...
This article summarizes a roundtable discussion of scholars that took place at the Association for A...
The Hmong people are a culture that originated in Southern China. However, many Hmong people fled to...
Page 55-56Review of Burt, S.M., and Ratliff, M., The Hmong language in Wisconsin: Language Shift and...
In the late 1970s the aftermath of the Vietnam War brought displaced Hmong refugees (along with othe...
Despite being a relatively new refugee group relocating to the United States during the 1970s and 19...
Review of: Hmong America: Reconstructing Community in Diaspora, by Chia Youyee Vang
Living as refugees in the United States, the Hmong are struggling to adapt to a new culture. The you...
Prepared by the Center for Urban and Regional Affairs, Southeast Asian Refugee Studies Project, Univ...
As the changing demographics in the United States are steadily shifting the student populations in c...
When the United States pulled out of Southeast Asia following the Vietnam War, they left behind an e...
Interview with Dr. Fungchatou Lo discussing Hmong culture and experiences with Hmong refugee resettl...
The Hmong are an ethnic hill tribe group originally from Southern China with concentrated population...