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Teaching for Tolerance and Understanding during the Japanese Internment: Lessons for Educators Today
Banks, Cherry A. McGee – Educational Perspectives, 2007
Following the Japanese attack on the US naval base at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the nation was thrown into a state of fear and hysteria. On February 19, 1942, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order No. 9066 which resulted in more than 120,000 persons of Japanese ancestry being either interned in relocation centers, drafted, or…
Descriptors: Democracy, War, Japanese Americans, Relocation
Daniels, Roger – History Teacher, 2002
In this article, the author attempts to connect two events--the wartime incarceration of the Japanese Americans and Americans' contemporary regret for that action--in a narrative that also tries to answer the most difficult kind of question that a historian can ask: How does change occur? How did it come about that what had been a popular wartime…
Descriptors: Japanese Americans, United States History, Institutionalized Persons, War

Gallavan, Nancy P.; Roberts, Teresa A. – Social Education, 2005
In 1942, less than four months after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and the subsequent United States entry into World War II , nearly 120,000 persons of Japanese ancestry living along the west coast of the United States were ordered to evacuate their homes and sent to internment camps. The evacuees, separated from their extended families, former…
Descriptors: Japanese Americans, War, World History, United States History
Trager, James G. – Perspectives: The Civil Rights Quarterly, 1980
Discusses the discrimination against and internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and reminds readers that Congress and the Supreme Court approved the mass discriminatory action. Draws a parallel to current discrimination against Iranians in the United States. (GC)
Descriptors: Discriminatory Legislation, Economic Factors, Ethnic Discrimination, Japanese Americans