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         Vietnamese Asian Americans:     more books (101)
  1. Underemployment Among Asians in the United States: Asian Indian, Filipino, and Vietnamese Workers (Garland Studies in the History of American Labor) by Anna B. Madamba, 1998-04-01
  2. Immigrant Community Services in Chinese and Vietnamese Enclaves (New Americans Recent Immigration and American Society) by Winston Tseng, 2006-12-11
  3. Vietnamese Americans (We Are America) by Margaret C. Hall, 2003-05
  4. Vietnamese Americans (One Nation Set 2) by Bryan Nichol, Nichol Bryan, 2004-04
  5. Vietnamese Americans (Spirit of America Our Cultural Heritage) by C. Ann Fitterer, 2002-08
  6. Vietnamese Americans (New Immigrants (Chelsea House).) by Liz Sonneborn, 2006-12-30
  7. I Am Vietnamese American (Our American Family) by Felice Blanc, Liza Stuart, 1998-08
  8. Identity Formation of Vietnamese Immigrant Youth in an American High School (New Americans (Lfb Scholarly Publishing Llc).) by Craig Centrie, 2004-03
  9. The Vietnamese Americans (The New Americans) by Hien Duc Do, 1999-12-30
  10. Identity Construction among Chinese-Vietnamese Americans: Being, Becoming, and Belonging (The New Americans: Recent Immigration and American Society) by Monica M. Trieu, 2009-11-25
  11. To Bear Any Burden: The Vietnam War and Its Aftermath in the Words of Americans and Southeast Asians (Vietnam War Era Classics Series) by Al Santoli, Al Santoli, 1999-04-01
  12. Vietnamese Americans: Lessons in American History A Curriculum and Resource Guide by Inc. Orange County Asian and Pacific Islander Community Alliance, 2001
  13. The Dream Shattered: Vietnamese Gangs in America by Patrick Du Phuoc Long, Laura Ricard, 1997-02-27
  14. Little Saigons: Staying Vietnamese in America by Karin Aguilar?San Juan, 2009-08-06

21. Asian Americans
As Chinese americans, we are often mistaken for vietnamese or Korean americans.In 1994, asian americans were thought of as foreigners who consistently
http://www.maxwell.syr.edu/maxpages/classes/soc248/Asianas Post WWII 4-24-00 .ht
Asian American Immigration CHINESE MIGRATION Beginning in the 1980s, we have been one of the fastest growing immigrant groups here in the United States. A 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act began to eliminate some of the anti-Asian racism. The act reunified families, protected the domestic labor force, and called for immigration of people with needed skills. It also made us eligible for citizenship, which we had long been waiting for. The 1965 Immigration Act abolished the national-origins quota system and created an annual quota of 20,000 of us Asians. Therefore, the amount of immigrants increased drastically as time progressed. STEREOTYPES Almost ninety percent of Chinese immigrants were women between 1946 and 1952. About 348,000 of us came here from Hong Kong and Taiwan between 1941 and 1980. Beginning in 1981, the number of immigrants increased coming from the mainland as opposed to coming from Hong Kong and Taiwan. We reached a population of 1.6 million people between 1980 and 1990. By the mid-1990s we were approximately one-third of all Asian Americans. As Chinese Americans, we are often mistaken for Vietnamese or Korean Americans. In 1994, Asian Americans were thought of as foreigners who consistently competed for jobs. We have been stereotyped as "model minorities" because we are ambitious and hard working. After the United States declared war on Japan in 1941

22. NCHS - Publications And Information Products - Health Status Of Asian Americans:
Health Status of asian americans United States, 199294. asian national origin groups(Chinese, Filipino, asian Indian, Japanese, vietnamese, and Korean
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/pubd/ad/300-291/ad298.htm
Advance Data From Vital and Health Statistics
NCHS Home
Advance Data Home AD 1-100 AD 101-150 ... Contact us Health Status of Asian Americans: United States, 1992-94 Advance Data 298. This report compares the health status of selected Asian national origin groups (Chinese, Filipino, Asian Indian, Japanese, Vietnamese, and Korean), the Asian and Pacific Islander (API) population, and the non-Hispanic white population. Data were collected by means of the 1992-94 National Health Interview Survey. National estimates of household and individual characteristics, disease incidence and prevalence, general health status measures, and health services utilization are presented from data pooled from basic questionnaire and special topic questionnaires. Data Highlights:
A greater age-adjusted percent of Vietnamese (17.2 percent) and Korean (12.8 percent) persons had fair or poor respondent-assessed health status.
Age-adjusted data showed a higher percent of Korean adult smokers (22.5 percent) than Chinese or Asian Indian adults (10.0 and 8.7 percent respectively).
A higher percent of Vietnamese (21.2 percent) and Asian Indian (18.0 percent) adults reported knowing nothing about AIDS compared with Japanese adults (5.1 percent).

23. This Page Does Not Exist Anymore
foster understanding and communication between americans and the San José A forumfor vietnameseAmerican artists Galleries, Art Market asian Art Now asian Art
http://www.universes-in-universe.de/america/us_asia/english.htm
Universes in Universe - Worlds of Art
This page does not exist anymore.
to the main page

[after 5 seconds you will be forwarded authomatically]

24. The Union Of Vietnamese Student Associations Southern California - Tet Festival
In 1998, it is estimated that 3,777,015 asian americans live in California, with isestimated that there are 1.2 million, and over 300,000 vietnamese living in
http://www.nonsong.org/tet/page4.htm
Home Tet 2000 About Tet Festival The Asian American Market The Organizer The Importance of the Growing Asian American Market Vietnamese-American community is educated and growing Immigration has fueled the dramatic growth of the Asian American population. In 1998, it is estimated that 3,777,015 Asian Americans live in California, with 1,926,495 in 5 Southern California counties, and 344,300 in Orange County, alone. Also, in 1998, it is estimated that there are 1.2 million, and over 300,000 Vietnamese living in the U.S. and Southern California, respectively. (Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC 20233) Stable Family Households Asian American children are more likely to be living with two parents than children in any other racial or ethnic group. In 1990, the percentage of children living with two parents was 83 percent for Asian Americans. High Educational Achievement In 1997, 42 percent of all Asian Americans ages 25 and older had a college or professional degree. About 43 percent of foreign-born Asians had at least an undergraduate college degree in 1997. Nearly 40 percent of U.S.-born Asians had a bachelor’s degree or higher in 1997.

25. Data And Maps
asianamericans in Minnesota. The following table shows some of the larger asian andPacific Islander Hmong 16,833 Korean 11,576 vietnamese 9,387 Chinese 8,980
http://www.mnplan.state.mn.us/datanetweb/maplib/demogs/race/asamgrow.htm
Minnesota Planning Home Help Preferences ... Governor
Saturday, 12-Apr-2003 06:30:51 CDT About Minnesota Planning Staff Directory Advanced Search Criminal Justice ... More subjects Programs Criminal Justice Statistics Center Critical Issues Environmental Quality Board Land Management Information Center ... State Demographic Center Agency Information About Contact Subscribe Display Options Print friendly Preferences
Maps from Minnesota Planning
You may browse for maps at Minnesota Planning using the theme buttons above. Records for static maps are grouped by coverage.
Dynamic Maps
A number of systems at Minnesota Planning produce maps dynamically on the web to help you visualize data in a wide range of socio-economic areas. These tools include:
  • MN Mapper , June 13, 2002: Create and print a simple state map with your choice of features including county boundaries, county seats, highways, major lakes and rivers. (web based mapping tool). Minnesota Milestones and Children's report card : These two integrated systems allow you to map the following variables. This database currently holds

26. Children's Services - Books About Asian Americans
Books About asian americans. Ut, a vietnamese girl attending school in the UnitedStates, lonely for her mother left behind in Vietnam, makes a new friend who
http://www.monroe.lib.in.us/childrens/asianam.html
Children's Services - Monroe County Public Library, Indiana - (812) 349-3100 Booklists Search Tools Web Sites Program Schedule
Books About Asian Americans
Picture Books Friedman, Ina R. How My Parents Learned to Eat.
An American sailor courts a Japanese girl and each tries, in secret, to learn the other's way of eating. Kroll, Virginia L. Pink Paper Swans.
Janetta, intrigued by the paper animals her neighbor Mrs. Tsujimoto makes, learns the art of origami and becomes Mrs. Tsujimoto's hands when her arthritis makes it difficult for her to continue. Low, William. Chinatown.
A boy and his grandmother wind their way through the streets of Chinatown, enjoying all the sights and smells of the Chinese New Year's Day. Rattigan, Jama Kim. Dumpling Soup.
A young Hawaiian girl of Korean descent tries to make dumplings for her family's New Years celebration. Say, Allen. Allison.
When Allison realizes that she looks more like her favorite doll than like her parents, she comes to terms with this unwelcomed discovery through the help of a stray cat. Say, Allen.

27. The Unequal Burden Of Cancer Among Asian Americans
However, in asian americans, Liver cancer is the third are 18% higher than amongWhite americans (5). Cervical cancer incidence rates in vietnamese women are
http://www.apamsa.org/resources/unequal_burden_of_cancer.html

28. Condensed AAPI HIGHLIGHTS OF INTERIM REPORT TO THE PRESIDENT
Ø 35% of asian americans and Pacific Islanders live in linguistically isolated 52%of Laotian American households, 44% of vietnamese American households, 41
http://www.apamsa.org/resources/aapi_highlights.html

29. Cancers In Asian-Americans And Pacific Islanders: Migrant Studies
breast cancer incidence rates, 19881992, among asian-americans and Pacific are age-adjustedto the standard world population, except for vietnamese-americans.
http://www.camsociety.org/issues/fredli.htm

Cancers in Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders: Migrant Studies
Frederick P. Li, M.D. and Karen Pawlish, M.P.H Geographic Variation in Cancer Incidence Rates . Substantial geographic variations in cancer incidence rates have been found within and among nations. Data show that cancers of the lung, breast, colon/rectum, ovary, and prostate tend to be more common in developed countries In contrast, cancers of the cervix, stomach, and liver are more common in some developing countries, including most Asian nations . Among migrants, cancer incidence rates trend toward patterns in the country of adoption . These alterations in cancer rates are probably due to environmental and lifestyle changes, such as diet and cigarette smoking. Cancer rates can differ even within nations. In the U.S., lung cancer mortality rates are significantly higher in the southeast, where tobacco is cultivated and cigarette smoking rates are high . In China, lung cancer mortality rates are high in the north, in areas with widespread industrial and household pollution from fossil fuels . There are also large regional differences in nasopharyngeal cancer mortality rates in China, with higher rates in the southeast among the Cantonese; explanations may be genetic and dietary factors

30. NDEP . Take Care Of Your Heart. Manage Your Diabetes.
to help spread the word to asian americans and Pacific Islanders with diabetes andtheir family members. Thai version (PDF156K)*; vietnamese version (PDF-93K)*.
http://ndep.nih.gov/get-info/Heartcare.htm

NDEP Home
Get Diabetes Information : Take Care of Your Heart. Manage Your Diabetes.
Take Care of Your Heart. Manage Your Diabetes.
For Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

This updated fact sheet provides the latest statistics on the prevalence of diabetes overall and includes new information about the link between diabetes and heart disease and the good news about diabetes preventing type 2 diabetes.
Radio PSAs. View more online materials about diabetes control for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. *This file is in PDF format, which requires the free Adobe Acrobat Reader for viewing. Attention visually impaired visitors: To use common screen reading programs with PDF documents, please visit access.adobe.com , which provides a set of free tools that convert PDF documents to simple HTML or ASCII text. National Diabetes Education Program (NDEP) http://ndep.nih.gov

31. HepNet - Asian-Americans At Higher Risk For Hepatitis C - Study
high levels of HCV among asianamericans at a from reaching many in the Southeastasian immigrant community Song Manh'' (Wellness), a vietnamese-language family
http://www.hepnet.com/hepc/news031600.html

32. UCSF Today News
UCSF professor of medicine and principal investigator for the vietnamese CommunityHealth findings but also to promote a health agenda for asianamericans. .
http://pub.ucsf.edu/today/news.php?news_id=200104238

33. Asian Americans:  Women Of Color Health Data Book
By the year 2000, Filipinos are projected to be the largest asian subpopulation,followed by Chinese, vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese americans, in that order
http://www.4woman.gov/owh/pub/woc/asian.htm
Search our database by Health Topic or enter your own keywords WOMEN OF COLOR HEALTH DATA BOOK FACTORS AFFECTING THE HEALTH OF WOMEN OF COLOR Asian Americans Although health issues for Asian Americans and Pacific Islander Americans often are analyzed jointly, in this fact book the groups are separated. Native Pacific Islanders are considered Native Americans and are discussed with American Indians/Alaska Natives. (See discussion of Pacific Islanders in section on Native Americans.) Asian populations are discussed together. This change is made because native Pacific Islanders are only 5 percent of the Asian and Pacific Islander total and often have health outcomes more akin to those of American Indians/Alaska Natives than to Asian subpopulations. In addition, native Pacific Islanders are not immigrants to the United States as are Asian populations. Thus, an effort has been made throughout to disaggregate Asians from Pacific Islanders whenever possible, and to display data for the groups separately. Aggregate statistics for Asians and Pacific Islanders are used, however, when they are the best available. Asian Americans are immigrants to the United States (and their descendants) from more than 20 countries who speak more than 100 different languages. They come from places such as China, India, Japan, the Philippines, Korea, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Thailand and represent more than 60 different ethnicities (22). In 1990, the largest subpopulations (in descending order) were persons of Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Asian Indian, Korean, and Southeast Asian ancestry. By the year 2000, Filipinos are projected to be the largest Asian subpopulation, followed by Chinese, Vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese Americans, in that order (120).

34. Vietnamese Success Saluted
of former President Clinton's White House Initiative on asian americans and Pacific anOlympia accountant and president of the vietnamese American Community of
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/58758_viets18.shtml
Jump to Weather Traffic Webtowns Mariners ... Forums NEWS Local Transportation Education Elections ... Special Reports COMMENTARY Opinion Columnists Letters David Horsey ... Forums COFFEE BREAK Mike Mailway TV Listings SHOPPING Archives NWclassifieds Jobs Autos ... Online Shop P-I ANYWHERE E-mail Newsletters News Alerts PDA Cell Phones ... Desktop
OUR AFFILIATES
Vietnamese success saluted Achievements celebrated, despite concerns Monday, February 18, 2002 By DAVID FISHER
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER Washington's Vietnamese community celebrated the Lunar New Year last night by collecting some of its luminaries. For a refugee population that started its emigration a scant 27 years ago, it's an impressive list. An assistant U.S. attorney general. The regional director of the Small Business Administration. The executive director of former President Clinton's White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. (Editor's Note: The original version of this story credited the wrong president.) All came here as refugees, unfamiliar with the language or the customs, said Norman Le, an Olympia accountant and president of the Vietnamese American Community of Washington State. They reached the top echelons of American government in less than a generation in the same way generations of immigrants from other lands have before, said Viet D. Dinh, recently appointed assistant U.S. attorney general for legal policy the highest ranking American government official in history from the Vietnamese American community.

35. Quality Of Health Care For Asian Americans
asian americans, particular Chinese, vietnamese, and Filipinos, are more likely to strongly agree that it is better to take care of one's own health and that
http://www.hungnguyen.com/PRNews/p_quality_health_care_asian.htm
Quality of Health Care for Asian Americans The Commonwealth Fund has just released its findings from the 2001 Health Care Quality Survey. The survey, conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates from April through November 2001, consisted of 25-minute telephone interviews in English, Spanish, Cantonese, Mandarin, Korean and Vietnamese with a random, national sample of 6,722 adults age 18 and older living in the continental U.S. The study oversampled adults living in areas with disproportionately large numbers of African Americans, Hispanics, and Asian Americans. The survey sample included 3488 white, 1153 Hispanics, 1037 African Americans, and 669 Asian Americans. The final data were weighted to the parameters of the adult population using the U.S. Census Bureau's March 2001 Current Population Survey. Highlights on Quality of Health Care for Asian Americans 1 in 5 Asian American adults ages 18-64 is uninsured or has been uninsured at some point in the past year, with especially high rates for Korean and Vietnamese Americans. 68% of Asian Americans have a regular doctor, though only 46% of Korean and 59% of Vietnamese respondents said they had one.

36. Issues Of Democracy, October 2000, Special Issue: Guide To Election 2000
says Gregory Rodriguez, an expert on asian americans at the Californiabased PepperdineInstitute for Public Policy. vietnamese americans lean Republican and
http://usinfo.state.gov/journals/itdhr/1000/ijde/cs315.16.htm
The Context
ASIAN AMERICAN VOTE SPLIT
AMONG DEMOCRATS, REPUBLICANS

Although Asian Americans tend to be slightly more conservative than other minority groups in the United States, their vote in recent elections has been almost evenly split between the Republican and Democratic Parties and therefore could swing either way in particular elections, according to experts who have analyzed Asian American voting patterns. Nevertheless, data compiled by the Population Reference Bureau (PRB), a nonpartisan organization that collects and analyzes information based on U.S. Census data, indicates a trend toward the Democrats in recent years. This is attributed to concern among Asian Americans about the immigration views of some Republican officeholders. "Japanese Americans and Filipino Americans tend to vote Democratic," says Gregory Rodriguez, an expert on Asian Americans at the California-based Pepperdine Institute for Public Policy. "Vietnamese Americans lean Republican and Chinese Americans check the 'decline to state' category on their registration cards more than either major party. Korean Americans divide almost evenly between the two major parties." Asian Americans tend to be more conservative "because in general they are wealthier and better educated than most other groups, including whites," says Karl Haub, PRB's expert on the Asian American community. "This is particularly true among the longer standing groups such as the Chinese and the Japanese less true among the newer Asian American communities, particularly those who came here from Southeast Asia during the refugee migrations of the 1980s." The statistics indicate that 40 percent of Asian Americans hold a college degree compared to 25 percent of whites, for example.

37. Asian Americans: The Movement & The Moment
French colonialism, to the 1960s antiwar activism of vietnamese students and intohis wide-ranging survey of gay and lesbian asian americans from the
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/aasc/aam/writers.html
Asian Americans: the Movement and the Moment Home Tell Me More Table of Contents Contributors Information Together with the complete table of contents of articles and writers, here is a sampling of ten of the unique, compelling personal accounts you will find in Asian Americans: The Movement and the Moment that break the stereotypes of docile and passive Asian Americans during the period 1965-2001: Pat Sumi (1944-1997) a third generation Japanese American, discovered linkages between African farmers in Nigeria and her own family in Japan, then worked in Mississippi and Atlanta in 1966-67 doing voter registration, organizing, attending black churches, and demonstrating for equality. Subsequently, Sumi began to organize American soldiers against the Vietnam War. Warren Mar Prosy Abarquez-Delacruz Corky Lee Miriam Ching Yoon Louie Nancy Hom Tram Quang Nguyen Daniel C. Tsang

38. Vietnamese Vote Strays From GOP
Lee said most asianAmerican voters are moderates at heart, one reason so manyChinese- and vietnamese-americans decline to state a party preference.
http://www.vpac-usa.org/vnamerican/sjmn_19990919.htm
Vietnamese vote strays from GOP
Newcomers show less party loyalty
Published Sunday, September 19, 1999, in the San Jose Mercury News BY KEN MCLAUGHLIN
Mercury News Staff Writer
Because of their staunch anti-communism and unswerving loyalty to the Republican Party, Vietnamese refugees have long been dubbed the "Cuban-Americans of California.'' But a new analysis of California voter registration data has uncovered a striking trend: Vietnamese-Americans are beginning to abandon the GOP in favor of the Democratic Party or no party at all. And although the trend isn't as dramatic, Chinese-American voters the only other major Asian-American group that has favored the GOP are beginning to register more often as Democrats or decline to state a party preference. In Santa Clara County, home to the second-largest Vietnamese emigre community in the country, more new Vietnamese-American voters registered as Democrats than Republicans in the past three years, says American Data Management Inc., a Santa Clara firm that sells voter-registration data to political campaigns nationwide. Last year, 33 percent of new Vietnamese-American voters in the county registered Democratic vs. 27.9 percent Republican. That contrasts sharply with the early 1990s, when there were three Vietnamese-American Republicans registered to vote for every Democrat.

39. Subject Guides -- Asian American Studies
site provides links and information related to the vietnamese American communityin a wealth of information related to the scholarly study of asian americans.
http://www.csulb.edu/library/subj/asian.html
Subject Guides Asian American Studies
This is only a sampling of subject headings which may be used to search COAST. For a more complete list of headings relevant to ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES, consult the Library of Congress Subject Headings volumes located in Reference or near the COAST computers in the lobby of the Library. Click on any of the following subjects now to retrieve records from COAST. If you would like to search for a subject other than those listed, click here now
ELECTRONIC REFERENCE SOURCES
Try this link for access to the University of California Press Scholarship Editions Click on "browse by subject" or do a keyword search for the fulltext of books on Asian Americans.
NetLibrary

NetLibrary is a collection o f 4,354 rece Electronic Resources page. These resources are relevant to research in ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES. They are available in Reference in the Library. For a complete list (with descriptions) of all ELECTRONIC REFERENCE SOURCES at the CSULB Library, please click HERE
Over 2000 scholarly journals, books, review articles, and Ph.D. dissertations covering United States and Canadian history and culture (from prehistoric times to the present). Coverage: late 1950s to date.

40. Vietnamese In The US
to the common stereotype of a US racial minority.” (asian americans Diverse andGrowing, Sharon M. Lee). The nation's largest vietnamese American community
http://www.csulb.edu/colleges/cla/heritage-languages-program/vietnamese.html
The Vietnamese Language and Culture in the US: Did You Know?
The Vietnamese population in the US has grown by 76% and the Asian Indian population by 55% since 1990. These groups have become the third and fourth in size after Chinese and Filipino. If fertility and mortality rates and net immigration continue at moderate levels, the Asian American population is likely to more than triple by 2050. (Numbers and Needs: Ethnic and Linguistic Minorities in the United States, Vol. 8, No. 4, 1998). Certain Asian groups, especially recent immigrants from Southeast Asia, have low educational levels, are more likely to be found among semi-skilled or unskilled workers, and experience high poverty rates in contrast to other groups established earlier in this country and US born Asians. (Numbers and Needs: Ethnic and Linguistic Minorities in the United States, Vol 8. No, 4, 1998). “The growing diversity of Asian Americans and relatively high rate of marriage of Asians to non-Asians in the United States are among the reasons why Asian American do not conform to the common stereotype of a U.S. racial minority.” (Asian Americans: Diverse and Growing, Sharon M. Lee) "The nation's largest Vietnamese American community is centered in a neighborhood of Westminster, where nearly 15% of

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