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Irene Yasutake Hirano Inouye: Remembering a Treasured Friend

For more than 65 years in the U.

inspired by those at San Francisco State and UC Berkeley.including Asian American studies.

Irene Yasutake Hirano Inouye: Remembering a Treasured Friend

A NORC survey found that only 44% strongly agree that the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II was wrong.The impact of this racism on AAPIs self-perception is grave: just 40% of Asian Americans completely agree that they belong in the U.we were reminded of the simple fact that a large swath of the population across the country still knows very little about who we are as Asian Americans in all our diversity and humanity.

Irene Yasutake Hirano Inouye: Remembering a Treasured Friend

The field has corrected long-standing misconceptions for over 57 years and it is now in the crosshairs of the attacks against DEI.If there is one thing that we can learn from Japanese American incarceration history.

Irene Yasutake Hirano Inouye: Remembering a Treasured Friend

Ethnic studies scholars and those in related fields have uncovered little-known histories of Black.

many people confused lies for truth.while embracing the future by continuing to provide resources that foster Japanese culture and language

with content contributed from the broader newsroom.com/2025/10/15/poc-verticals-axed-nbc-journalists-aapi/#:~:text=While%20some%20members%20of%20those.

its stories boast the largest audience numbers on NBCNews.and part of a larger sign of the media industrys retreat from diversity.