About the UCLA Asian American Studies Center

Partnerships - Local, National, and Global
Since its founding in 1969, the Center has established partnerships, collaborations, and exchanges with hundreds of public and private institutions across the nation and around the world, and has played a critical role in developing Southern California’s infrastructure of social service agencies, civil rights organizations, museums, historical societies, media and cultural groups, and business associations that serve and represent the Asian American and Pacific Islander population. A list of selected organizations includes (but is not limited to) the following (click here for list).
During the past three and a half decades, the Center has:
- Recruited the largest faculty in Asian American Studies in the nation, with 38 professors.
- Built the largest teaching program, with a B.A. major and minor, an M.A. major, and in 2004, the Department of Asian American Studies.
- Since 1971, published the leading scholarly journal in Asian American Studies, Amerasia Journal, and over 200 books on Asian Americans. In 2003, the Center launched a second national journal, AAPI Nexus: Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders Policy, Practice, and Community.
- Developed the most diverse library and archival resources on Asian Americans in the nation.
- Established strong working relationships with hundreds of organizations and leaders in California, nationally, and globally.
DIRECTOR'S OVERVIEW
Our Historical Mission
The UCLA Asian American Studies Center was established during the 1969-1970 academic year as a result of faculty, student, alumni, and community advocacy. "The Center," the founding steering committee wrote in its proposal to the UCLA administration in 1969, "will hopefully enrich the experience of the entire university by contributing to an understanding of the long neglected history, rich cultural heritage, and present position of Asian Americans in our society."
Through its programs in research, teaching, publications and other endeavors, the Center has pursued its original mission, and has sought to enrich and inform not only the UCLA community, but also an array of broader audiences and sectors in the state, the nation, and internationally.
Today, UCLA is recognized as the premier research and teaching institution in the field of Asian American Studies.
37 Years of Asian American Studies
In 2004, the UCLA Asian American Studies Center celebrated its thirty-fifth year and the official establishment of the Department of Asian American Studies. At UCLA, we now have a Center and a Department working in dynamic fashion.
The Asian American Studies Center is one of four ethnic studies centers at UCLA and one of the oldest programs in Asian American Studies in the nation. Together with the Department, the Center has core programs in research, teaching, and publications; in library and archival collections; in student leadership development; in joint university community research projects; in endowment and development efforts; and in public educational activities.
The Center’s development has coincided with the dramatic growth of the Asian American and Pacific Islander population. In 1970, the U.S. Census indicated that there were 1.5 million Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders nationally, with the majority being American-born; less than 10% of the UCLA student body were Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. Today, there are over 12 million Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders nationally, the majority of whom are immigrants. At UCLA over 40% of the current 36,000 undergraduate and graduate students are Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. By 2020, the AAPI population in the U.S. is expected to reach 20 million.
As an educator and as Director of the UCLA Asian American Center, I believe that the Center and the Department of Asian American Studies will play an ever-dynamic role in helping to understand the past and the promise of the Asian American and Pacific Islander experience in the twenty-first century.
But we must do much more than react to today’s challenging social, economic, and environmental issues.
We must act decisively, think creatively, and educate courageously.
Don T. Nakanishi
Director and Professor
UCLA Asian American Studies Center
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