Since the fall of Saigon in 1975, over three-quarters of a million Indochinese refugees have come to the United States. Numerous studies have been conducted on their adjustment to American society and on resettlement policies and programs. This book covers these very topics and is organized into three sections. The first part provides some background on the cultures and political histories of the major Indochinese groups and on federal and state policies and programs. The second investigates problems experienced by the Indochinese, particularly with regard to their health, education, language abilities, and employment and is based on a 1981 needs assessment survey of refugees in the San Diego area. The third section of the book presents pol...
The reader seeking fresh and intellectually stimulating material on American ethnic history will fin...
Review of: "The Good Governor: Robert Ray and the Indochinese Refugees of Iowa," by Matthew R. Walsh
Review of: "The Good Governor: Robert Ray and the Indochinese Refugees of Iowa," by Matthew R. Walsh
Since the passage of the immigration acts of 1965, a large number of skilled Asians have migrated to...
Is it possible to analyze a political dilemma as convoluted and desperate as the turmoil existing to...
This volume does not aim to be a definitive history of the Italians of New Jersey, but it is an exce...
This book is primarily a discussion of foreign ethnic groups who have come to the United States. Per...
There are those who have heralded the 1980s as The Decade of the Italian American as many of the 2...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
This fascinating and insightful book is a comparative ethnographic study of Vietnamese and Soviet Je...
The comparative nature of this book is its most outstanding feature. The editors and authors have al...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
The reader seeking fresh and intellectually stimulating material on American ethnic history will fin...
Review of: "The Good Governor: Robert Ray and the Indochinese Refugees of Iowa," by Matthew R. Walsh
Review of: "The Good Governor: Robert Ray and the Indochinese Refugees of Iowa," by Matthew R. Walsh
Since the passage of the immigration acts of 1965, a large number of skilled Asians have migrated to...
Is it possible to analyze a political dilemma as convoluted and desperate as the turmoil existing to...
This volume does not aim to be a definitive history of the Italians of New Jersey, but it is an exce...
This book is primarily a discussion of foreign ethnic groups who have come to the United States. Per...
There are those who have heralded the 1980s as The Decade of the Italian American as many of the 2...
The importance of documenting “oral histories” in print has to be emphasized among all Pacific Asian...
This fascinating and insightful book is a comparative ethnographic study of Vietnamese and Soviet Je...
The comparative nature of this book is its most outstanding feature. The editors and authors have al...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
The reader seeking fresh and intellectually stimulating material on American ethnic history will fin...
Review of: "The Good Governor: Robert Ray and the Indochinese Refugees of Iowa," by Matthew R. Walsh
Review of: "The Good Governor: Robert Ray and the Indochinese Refugees of Iowa," by Matthew R. Walsh