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Full-Text Articles in Law
A Commander’S Power, A Civilian’S Reason: Justice Jackson’S Korematsu Dissent, John Q. Barrett
A Commander’S Power, A Civilian’S Reason: Justice Jackson’S Korematsu Dissent, John Q. Barrett
Law and Contemporary Problems
Barrett examines the dissent opinion of Supreme Court Justice Robert Houghwout Jackson in Korematsu v. United States, which centered on the internment of Japanese Americans during WWII. Although the dissent has been criticized as incoherent, it contains strong legal implications within its complexity.
A Penny For Their Thoughts: Draft Resistance At The Poston Relocation Center, Eric L. Muller
A Penny For Their Thoughts: Draft Resistance At The Poston Relocation Center, Eric L. Muller
Law and Contemporary Problems
Muller examines the prosecution and sentencing of Japanese Americans who resisted the draft of WWII from their internment camps. Although the hundreds of cases were almost identical, approaches to justice and sentencing of offenders varied widely.
Watching The Watchers: Enemy Combatants In The Internment Shadow, Jerry Kang
Watching The Watchers: Enemy Combatants In The Internment Shadow, Jerry Kang
Law and Contemporary Problems
In the past, the government has avoided accountability for the atrocity of allowing the internment of Japanese Americans during WWII. Kang examines whether the federal judiciary is again shying away from its responsibilities of holding the other branches accountable for their actions as they conduct their war on terror.
Walking While Muslim, Margaret Chon, Donna E. Arzt
Walking While Muslim, Margaret Chon, Donna E. Arzt
Law and Contemporary Problems
The authors examine the linkage between the social justice claims of Japanese Americans during WWII and Muslim Americans in today's post-9/11 era. Muslims are considered a significant component of the war on terror, but it is unclear whether this classification is based upon race or religion.
The Constitution Glimpsed From Tule Lake, Patrick O. Gudridge
The Constitution Glimpsed From Tule Lake, Patrick O. Gudridge
Law and Contemporary Problems
Although Ex Parte Endo undid the wrongs that resulted from the US Supreme Court decision Korematsu v. United States, the Japanese Americans who faced internment during WWII cannot so easily put the past behind them. Gudridge examines the publication The Spoilage, which documents the political efforts of those inside the internment camp at Tule Lake, and relates them to Endo and Korematsu.
Play It Again, Uncle Sam, A. Wallace Tashima
Play It Again, Uncle Sam, A. Wallace Tashima
Law and Contemporary Problems
Tashima, currently a federal judge, relates his experience in a Japanese American internment camp at Poston AZ during WWII. The unjust internment was in part a failure of the federal courts to protect the constitutional rights of American citizens.
Interning The “Non-Alien” Other: The Illusory Protections Of Citizenship, Natsu Taylor Saito
Interning The “Non-Alien” Other: The Illusory Protections Of Citizenship, Natsu Taylor Saito
Law and Contemporary Problems
Saito draws parallels between the internment of Japanese Americans during WWII and the current actions being taken by the US government as it seeks out terrorists in the post-9/11 world. The action of unequal prosecution of citizens based on race has roots that extend far back in American history, and the unfair internment of citizens in the 20th century should not be considered an aberration of public policy.
The Japanese American Cases, 1942-2004: A Social History, Roger Daniels
The Japanese American Cases, 1942-2004: A Social History, Roger Daniels
Law and Contemporary Problems
Daniels examines the changing reactions of the government and the public to the internment of Japanese Americans during WWII and in the six decades following. Some comparisons can be drawn between this action and the attitudes encountered by the public in the wake of the Sep 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.