Thinking through Internment: 12/7 and 9/11, 28 AMERASIA 42-50 (2002) (peer-reviewed).
- reprinted in 9 ASIAN L.J. 195 (2002) and in ASIAN AMERICANS ON WAR AND PEACE 55-63 (RUSSELL C. LEONG & DON T. NAKANISHI, EDS. 2002).
Abstract
The terrorist attacks on 9-11 have frequently been analogized to Pearl
Harbor. In many ways, the analogy is apt. Just as that attack launched
us into World War Il, the attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon have launched us into a new kind of war against terrorism. But
waging this sort of borderless war poses great risks, not only to the
soldiers commanded to fight but also to core American values. In this
way, Pearl Harbor raises other disturbing memories, those of the
internment. In this essay, Professor Kang draws lessons from the
internment of Japanese Americans to the current war on terror.
Keywords: internment, terrorism, civil liberties, 9-11, profiling
[download published version @ SSRN]