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Social media provides ethno-racial immigrant groups-especially
those who cannot vote due to factors such as lack of citizenship
and limited English proficiency-the ability to mobilize and connect
around collective issues. Online spaces and discussion forums have
encouraged many Asian Americans to participate in public policy
debates and take action on social justice issues. This form of
digital group activism serves as an adaptive political empowerment
strategy for the fastest-growing and largest foreign-born
population in America. Asian American Connective Action in the Age
of Social Media illuminates how associating online can facilitate
and amplify traditional forms of political action. James Lai
provides diverse case studies on contentious topics ranging from
affirmative action debates to textbook controversies to emphasize
the complexities, limitations, and challenges of connective action
that is relevant to all racial groups. Using a detailed
multi-methods approach that includes national survey data and
Twitter hashtag analysis, he shows how traditional immigrants,
older participants, and younger generations create online consensus
and mobilize offline to foment political change. In doing so, Lai
provides a nuanced glimpse into the multiple ways connective action
takes shape within the Asian American community.
Social media provides ethno-racial immigrant groups-especially
those who cannot vote due to factors such as lack of citizenship
and limited English proficiency-the ability to mobilize and connect
around collective issues. Online spaces and discussion forums have
encouraged many Asian Americans to participate in public policy
debates and take action on social justice issues. This form of
digital group activism serves as an adaptive political empowerment
strategy for the fastest-growing and largest foreign-born
population in America. Asian American Connective Action in the Age
of Social Media illuminates how associating online can facilitate
and amplify traditional forms of political action. James Lai
provides diverse case studies on contentious topics ranging from
affirmative action debates to textbook controversies to emphasize
the complexities, limitations, and challenges of connective action
that is relevant to all racial groups. Using a detailed
multi-methods approach that includes national survey data and
Twitter hashtag analysis, he shows how traditional immigrants,
older participants, and younger generations create online consensus
and mobilize offline to foment political change. In doing so, Lai
provides a nuanced glimpse into the multiple ways connective action
takes shape within the Asian American community.
Asian Americans are emerging as a political force and yet their
politics have not been systematically studied by either social
scientists or politicians. Asian American politics transcend simple
questions of voting behavior and elective office, going all the way
back to early immigration laws and all the way forward to ethnic
targeting. For the first time, this book brings together original
sources on key topics influencing Asian American politics, knit
together by expert scholars who introduce each subject and place it
in context with political events and the greater emerging
literature. Court cases, legislation, demographics, and key pieces
on topics ranging from gender to Japanese American redress to the
Los Angeles riots to Wen Ho Lee round out this innovative reader on
a politically active group likely to grow in number and electoral
impact.
Pioneering book presents basic theory, experimental methods and results, solution of boundary value problems. Topics include creep, stress and strain, deformation analyses, multiple integral representation of nonlinear creep and relaxation, much more. Appendices. Bibliography.
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