The Emerging Majority: Where do Asian Americans |
On May 7, 2014, we organized a historic gathering of AAPI researchers in Washington, DC for what we hope will be an annual tradition for APA Heritage Month. About 100 people participated in this event, and we heard from 2 introductory speakers and presentations from 9 organizations. All in 90 minutes, with time to spare for Q&A! Here is the composite presentation for the event, featuring slides from all organizations. And here are some highlights from the event, with links to related reports: Richard Lui speaks on the importance of new and compelling data for driving news stories Wade Henderson notes the involvement of AAPIs in civil rights coalitions, Karthick Ramakrishnan unveils the Quick Stats feature of AAPI Data Terry Ao Minnis presents the Section 203/voter language access report Christine Chen presents on the need for voter outreach (report from APIAVote, NAAS, and AAJC) and previews a set of forthcoming factsheets from APIA Vote Marianne Chung previews an upcoming report from Action for Health Justice showing Sefa Aina introduces the EPIC/Advancing Justice report on Pacific Islanders, discusses the importance of context and process when researching NHPIs Bruce Thao discusses the Census-based report from Hmong National Development Lisa Hasegawa highlights findings from the 2013 poverty report from National CAPACD Navdeep Singh discusses Turban Myths, a report from SALDEF, Quyen Dinh presents two reports, one on economic empowerment/financial capabilities, and the other on the need for education agencies to collect and provide disaggregated data —————– The Emerging Majority: Where do Asian Americans & Pacific Islanders Fit In? The United States is set to become a majority-minority, or majority-people of color, nation by 2043. Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are central to this process, with the fastest rates of population growth nationwide and in many states. Despite the growing importance of AAPI communities, their policy visibility has been limited until recently due to the lack of public awareness and limited data. Want to know more about what is happening? Please join us for lunch in Washington DC on May 7, as we mark Asian Pacific American Heritage Month by featuring new policy reports on issues ranging from ACA enrollment and poverty, to voter registration and education disparities. Many groups will be in attendance, with copies of their recent reports. We will make a brief presentation, followed by lots of time for Q&A and networking. Hope to see you there! Copyright © 2014 AAPI Data A project of Karthick Ramakrishnan at the University of California, Riverside |