UCLA Asian American Studies Center


Winter 2010 Class Schedule

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The Center Headlines

Yale University Presents Highest Honor to UCLA Professor Don Nakanishi


Walter and Shirley Wang Establish First Endowed Chair and Program on US-China Relations and Chinese American Studies


UCLA AAS Center Co-Founder Morgan Chu Receives UCLA Medal

 

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AASC Press Publications

Amerasia Journal Index Search


UCLA releases Amerasia Journal women's issue: Where Women Tell Stories


Amerasia Journal: Call for Abstracts "Transoceanic Flows: Pacific Islander Interventions across the American Empire" Publication Date Spring 2011

 

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Center Resources

UCLA Asian American Studies Center Gift Giving


DOWNLOAD CROSSCURRENTS: Newmagazine of the UCLA Asian American Studies Center


Learn more about the Center? Download the UCLA Asian American Studies Center Brochure (PDF)

 

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Library/Reading Room

Friends of the Reading Room, UCLA Asian American Studies Center Library

 

Students & Community

UCLA Asian American Studies Center Scholarships and Fellowships


UCLA STUDENTS: Become a Free Member of the Center's Graduate and Undergraduate Student Associates Program


AASC General List-Serv Mailing List Registration

 

EthnoCommunications

Announcing the EthnoCommunications Winter Quarter Course


UCLA AASC EthnoCommunications student film selected for the ID Film Festival

Mitch Chang Promoted to Full Professor

The UCLA Asian American Studies Center is very proud to announce that Dr. Mitchell Chang has been promoted to Full Professor at UCLA's Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. An active member of the Center's Faculty Advisory Committee and former Book Review Editor of its Amerasia Journal, Professor Chang is one of the nation's leading experts on issues dealing with diversity in higher education.

His rigorous, empirically-based writings have appeared in the most influential scholarly and policy journals in the field of higher educational research, and have had a substantial impact on the national debate and legal deliberations dealing with affirmative action. His highly influential book (with Witt, D., Jones, J., & Hakuta, K.) Compelling Interest: Examining the Evidence on Racial Dynamics in Colleges and Universities.(Stanford University Press, 2002).was cited in the majority opinion written by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra D. O'Connor in the Grutter v. Bollinger (University of Michigan Law School) decision. Professor Chang has also received numerous academic accolades, including the Outstanding Outcomes Assessment Research Award by the American College Personnel Association and the National Academy of Education/Spencer Fellowship. In 2006, the national magazine Diverse: Issues in Higher Education named Professor Chang as one of its Top 10 Emerging Scholars of the nation.

Prior to coming to UCLA in 1999, Professor Chang held positions at the University of Massachusetts at Boston, Stanford University, and Loyola Marymount University. He received his Ph.D. from UCLA M.A. from Harvard University, and B.A. from UC Santa Barbara.

For more information about Professor Chang's research interests, publications and professional career, please see his web site: http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/faculty/chang/default.html

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