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Chinese Americans 

• Americans held conflicting views on Chinese immigration from the beginning

• Settlers unwilling to tolerate alien culture

• Labor was welcomed

• Chinese exclusion act of 1882 - 1943

• Gradual immigration from 1943 - 1965

• Increase in immigration came with the passage of the 1965 Immigration Act

• Significant component of Chinese in US are those adopted by American non-Chinese couples

• Chinese adoption laws loosened to promote adoptions of children

• Mainly girls abandoned under China’s one-child policy

• Faced complex issues of cultural and social identity

• Chinese Americans is a collective term

• Vast diversity within the group

• Language, nationality, and region of origin

• Divisions are sharply expressed

 

 

 

 

Occupational Profile of  

Chinese Americans 

• Early on discriminatory laws were passed making it difficult for Chinese to enter certain occupations

• Early on gravitated toward service occupations or low paying jobs that whites found undesirable

• Chinese sought relative safety of Chinatowns and the tourist industry

• New immigrants find it difficult finding jobs outside of Chinatown

• Lack of English is another reason for new immigrants seeking work in Chinatown

 

 

 

 

 

Chinatowns Today 

• The economic paradox of Chinatowns

• The impression of glitter and wealth hidden among economic deprivation and poverty in Chinatown

• Rich history of organizational membership

• Clan or tsu organization and functions (Surname Association)

• Membership based on clan and family  

ties

• Provided mutual assistance

  

• Hui Kuan (Huiguan)

• Benevolent associations that help members adjust to a new life

• Based on person’s district of origin rather than kinship

• Hui kuan associations are part of a larger organization, Chinese Six Companies, (Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association)

• Tongs or secret societies

• Formed on the basis of common interests

• Some are political, others protest exploitation of Chinese workers, others provide illegal services

   

• Conclusions reached about the various social organizations

• All have followed patterns created in traditional China

• All three types have performed similar functions

• Providing mutual assistance and representing interests to a sometimes hostile dominant group

• Because all groups had similar purposes and operated in the same locale, conflict was inevitable

• Old associations have declined in significance

• When communicating with dominant society, all groups downplayed problems of Chinatown

 

 

 

 

Social Problems 

• Myth that Chinese Americans and Chinatowns have no problems

• The tourist industry in Chinatown as double edged sword

• Jobs but at substandard pay

• Poverty

• Poor health care, especially for the elderly

• High suicide rates

• Poor and run-down housing

• Rising crime rates

• Poor working conditions

• Inadequate care for the elderly

• Weak union representation of laborers

 

 

 

 

Family and Religious Life 

• People’s Republic of In the China organized religion barely exists

• State policy discourages and prohibits foreign missionary activity

• Change in family life is most difficult cultural change to accept

• Domestic violence is a problem that recently surfaced

• Another problem is rise in gang activity

• Chinese American youth are not part of the model minority

 

Japanese Americans 

• Initial Japanese immigrants came around 1885 (Push and pull factors)

• Came from a very stratified society

• Most came from the lower class in Japan

• Initially many found employment in forestry, agriculture and then migrated to cities along the West Coast and established small businesses

• Feelings of “yellow peril” also directed at the Japanese

 

 

 

 

 

• Japanese Americans distinguish themselves according to number of generations a family has been in the US

• Each succeeding generation more acculturated and less likely to know Japanese

• Issei (pronounced “EE-say”)

• First generation born in Japan

• Nisei (“Nee-say)

• Children of first generation born in US

• Sansei (“SAHN-say”)

• Third generation must go back to grandparents to reach their roots

• Yonsei (“YAWN-say”)

• Fourth generation

• Kibei (“KEE-boy”)

• Nisei sent back to Japan for schooling and marriage then return to US

 

 

Early Discrimination 

• Laws were passed prohibiting Issei  from becoming citizens

• California Alien Land Act of 1913

• Prohibited anyone who was ineligible for citizenship from owning land and limited leases

• Economic impact on agricultural land owned by Japanese Americans

• Adjustments to the act led many to transfer ownership to their American born children

• Many left agriculture and migrated to cities and established small businesses catering to both the Japanese and dominant group

 

The Wartime Evacuation 

• Executive Order 9066, signed by President Roosevelt on February 13, 1942

• Defined strategic military areas and authorized the removal of people considered threats to national security

• Economic cost to the evacuees was in excess of $400 million or in current dollars $3.7 billion

• Psychological impact and weakened family ties

• The way out and the loyalty test

• Questions were ambiguous

 

 

 

  

• Japanese Americans demonstrated their loyalty to the United States by participating in the war effort

• Racism and internment

• German and Italian Americans were not interned

• Japanese in Hawaii left alone because they were and integral part of the economy

• Japanese migration from the camps after the war

• Mitsuye Endo v. United States (1944)

• Detainment was unconstitutional and consequently freedom was to be granted 

• Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (1981)

• Government formally apologized and give $20,000 tax-free  to 82,000 surviving internees

• Civil Liberties Act (1988)

• Signed by Ronald Reagan authorizing payments

• Payments slow in coming, other federal expenditures had priority

• Aging internees dying at rate of 200/month

• First checks issued in 1990 

Economic Picture 

• Socioeconomic status very different from Chinese Americans

• Upward mobility after WWII

• Japanese American educational attainment is higher than whites

• Occupationally have been upwardly mobile but still experience the glass ceiling and wall

• Higher median family income than whites

• Few excuses apart from racism to explain why Whites continue to view Japanese as different from them 

Family and Religious Life 

• Acculturation and change in family structure

• Conjugal nuclear family structure

• Neolocal pattern of residence

• Outgroup marriage is increasing and is approximately 50% among the Yonsei

• Rising divorce rate

• Crime, delinquency, and reported mental illness

• Japanese have lower incidence than other minorities and Whites

 

 

 

 

 

• Dual religious customs in Japan

• One can be Shinto and Buddhist at the same time

• United States the emphasis is on belonging to a single religion

• Immigrants found it easy to accept Christianity

• Impact is changing religious customs over time among Japanese-Americans

• Buddhism growing in US

• New adherents are Whites attracted to their perception of a more enriching value system 

Remnants of Prejudice  

and Discrimination 

• Fu Manchu image is gone, but replacement is not better

• Entertainment media, if present

• Karate experts or technical specialists

• Chinese Americans are ignored or misrepresented in history books

• Chinese and Japanese Americans believe racism has decreased but subtle reminders remain 

 

• Young Asian Americans are trying to fight racist and exclusionary practices

• Intermarriage, not typical, legal and more common

• More than 1/4th of Chinese Americans marry someone who is not Chinese

• Increase indicates Whites are increasingly accepting Chinese Americans

• Also suggests Chinese and Japanese ties to native cultures are weakening

• Chinese and Japanese Americans more acceptable and less alien to Whites

 Japanese American community struggles to maintain its cultural identity while paying homage to those interned during WWII

• Some are seeking to justify internment

• Critics feel that teaching of internment too biased and arguments for internment being correct action should be included

• Some Japanese Americans, especially Sansei are politically active

• Emerged as activists for environment

• Attack apparent rise in hate crimes in US against Asian Americans

 

 

 

 

 

• Lobbied for passage of Civil Rights Restoration Act

• Extending reparations to evacuees

• Japanese Americans show little evidence of wanting to maintain distinct way of life

• Values that have endured are

• Attitudes, beliefs, and goals shared by and rewarded by White middle-class

• Any Asian American is culturally part of a society that is dominated by a group that excludes others because of racial distinctions

 

 

 

 

 

ANSWER:-

Although China outweighs Japan in population size, they seem to keep up with them in the business world and trading markets. These two cultures are very competitive, although many Chinese seem to be very lucrative with Chinatown showcases they still experience other negative social and economical disadvantages, but with all of the glitter it is very hard to tell.

Japan has some many similarities that keep them active in the business world, especially in the technology field. They have the leading products that are very consumable and sell very well; many of these products have produce revenue within the United States as well. Japanese also share a economical down falls with their high unemployment rates.

China and Japan share some similar economic forums, but also have difference as far as their religion is concerned Chinese do not share open privileges as practiced by Japanese.

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