Workshop | Including Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in DEI Conversations
This workshop will help attendees understand how “otherness” is constructed by social forces, including by law and its institutions. Special attention will be paid to the historical and contemporary treatment of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. Attendees will learn key concepts such as intersectionality, perpetual foreign-ness, lumping, the model minority myth, and the bamboo ceiling and how they affect Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. These concepts will help attendees to understand better the challenges that Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders face in the workplace and with regard to access to services. This understanding will assist those who face DEI challenges themselves as well as those seeking to address DEI issues in the workplace and the delivery of services.
Handout(s):
Robert S. Chang
Professor of Law and Founder and Executive Director of the Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality at Seattle University School of Law.
He/Him
Robert S. Chang is a Professor of Law and is founder and Executive Director of the Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality at Seattle University School of Law. He writes primarily in the area of race and interethnic relations. He is the author of DISORIENTED: ASIAN AMERICANS, LAW AND THE NATION-STATE (NYU Press 1999) and MINORITY RELATIONS: INTERGROUP CONFLICT AND COOPERATION (University Press of Mississippi, 2016) and more than 60 articles, essays, and chapters published in leading law reviews and books on Critical Race Theory, LatCrit Theory, and Asian American Legal Studies. He is currently working on a co-authored book entitled THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT AND WHITE SOCIAL DOMINANCE (with Tanya K. Hernandez, Michalyn Steele & Carlton Waterhouse).
An elected member of the American Law Institute, he has received numerous recognitions for his scholarship and service. In 2021, the ACLU of Washington named him as co-recipient of the Kathleen Taylor Civil Libertarian Award for his role as co-counsel representing Black Lives Matter Seattle-King County in its lawsuit against the City of Seattle for its use of force against people protesting police brutality following the murder of George Floyd. In 2018, the Society of American Law Teachers recognized him with the M. Shanara Gilbert Human Rights Award for his work as co-counsel in taking to trial, successfully, a constitutional challenge to the enactment and enforcement of a facially neutral law that was used to terminate the Mexican American Studies Program at the Tucson Unified School District. For work in Washington, he was a co-recipient of the 2014 Charles A. Goldmark Distinguished Service Award from the Legal Foundation of Washington for his leadership role in a statewide task force on race and the criminal justice system. Following the murder of George Floyd, the task force was reconvened to produce a 10-year update to the 2011 report of the previous task force. This report was presented to the Washington Supreme Court in September 2021, and like the previous report, will be published simultaneously in the Gonzaga Law Review, the Seattle University Law Review, and the Washington Law Review.