Edward Taehan Chang Ethnic Studies/ Director of YOK Center, UC Riverside Riverside, Ca 92521 951-827-1825 951-827-4341 (fax) [email protected] EDUCATION: 8/84 - 4/90 University of California, Berkeley Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies. Dissertation title is "New Urban Crisis: Korean-Black Conflict in Los Angeles." 9/82 - 6/84 University of California, Los Angeles M.A. in Asian American Studies. Thesis title is "The Politics of Korean American Community: Kwangju Uprising and Its Impact." 1/81 - 6/82 University of California, Berkeley B.A. in Sociology with focus on Asian American Studies and Race Relations. EMPLOYMENT 7/2010 – Present University of California, Riverside Director, Young Oak Kim Center for Korean American Studies 7/92 - Present University of California, Riverside Professor of Ethnic Studies. Research topics include Inter-ethnic Relations in LA, Sexual Slavery during WW II, Coalition Building, Los Angeles Civil Unrest, and Immigration. 9/95 - 6/97 University of California, Riverside Director, Center for Asian Pacific America (CAPA). 9/90 - 6/92 California State Polytechnic University, Pomona Assistant Professor in Ethnic and Women's Studies. Adjunct Professor, Korea University in Korea, 2011. Adjunct Professor, Sogang University in Korea, 2009-2010. PUBLICATIONS: Books Korean Americans: A Concise History. With Carol Park. Riverside: Young Oak Kim Center for Korean American Studies, UC Riverside, 2019. Miju Hanin-Sa. Korean translation of Korean Americans: A Concise History. With Jia Yoon. Seoul: Korea University Press, 2019. Pachappa Camp: The First Koreatown in the United States. Seoul, Korea: SungAnDang, 2018. Lonesome Journey. By K.W. Lee, Luke and Grace Kim eds. Translated by Edward T. Chang. Seoul, Korea: Korea University Press, 2016. Korean American Pioneer Aviators: The Willows Airmen. Co-authored with Woo Sung Han. Lexington Books, 2015. 1920, Flying Skies of Korea. Co-authored with Woo Sung Han. Seoul, Korea: Book 21, September, 2013. African Americans. Reprint with new and updated introduction as a twentieth anniversary of LA civil unrest of 1993 edition by Korea University Press, 2012. Unsung Hero: The Story of Col. Young Oak Kim. By Woo Sung Han and Translated by Edward T. Chang. Riverside, California: The YOK Center for Korean American Studies, 2011. Korean Diaspora: Central Asia, Northeast Asia, and North America. Edited by Hesung Chun Koh and area editor Edward T. Chang. New Haven, Connecticut: East Rock Institute, 2008. Asian American: Neither White Nor Black. Seoul, Korea: Book World, 2004. Ethnic Peace in the American City: Building Community in Los Angeles and Beyond. With Jeannette Diaz Veizades. New York: New York University Press, 1999. Following the Footsteps of Korean Americans. With Janet C. Chang. Los Angeles: The Pacific Institute for Peacemaking, 1995: 184 pages. Multiethnic Coalitions Building in Los Angeles. With Eui-Young Yu (eds.) Los Angeles: Institute for Asian American and Pacific American Studies, California State University at Los Angeles, 1995. Los Angeles - Struggles Toward Multiethnic Community. With Russell Leong (eds.) 2 Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1995. Huk-in Gu-Dul-Eun Nu-Gu In-Ga: Who African Americans Are. Seoul: The Korea Economic Daily, 1993. Journal Articles “Last Journey to America: Deportation of Dosan Ahn Chang Ho.” The Review of Korean Studies, Vol. 23, No. 1. June 1, 2020: 161-182. “100th Anniversary of March 1st Movement and Its Implications for Korean American Community” Hallym Ilbonkak (Hallym Japanese Studies), No. 35, December 2019: 128-161. “Koreatown in Southern California and Non-profit Organizations.” With Jae Hee Lee. Studies of Koreans Abroad, 2018: 1-32. “Pachappa Camp: The First Koreatown in the United States” California History, 2018: 46-56. “Confronting Sa-i-gu: Twenty Years after the Los Angeles Riots” Reprint with update in In-Jin Yoon and Young-Hun Jeong eds. The Korean Diaspora: A Sourcebook. Seongnam-si: Korea, May 2017: 167-179. “Confronting Sa-i-gu: Twenty Years After the Los Angeles Riots.” American Studies. American Studies Institute, Seoul National University, 2013. “Remembering Sa-I-Gu” Amerasia Journal. Vol. 38, No. 1, 2012: 31-33. “Transportation of Korean Slave Laborers during World War II : Kanfu Ferries.” East Asia. 2007. “Korean Swapmeets in Los Angeles” Amerasia Journal. Vol. 30 No.1, 2004. “What does it mean to be Korean today: One Hundred Years of Koreas in America and More: Part I” Amerasia Journal. Vol. 29 No. 3, 2003: xix-xxvi. “Korean Forced Laborer and Women Used as ‘Sex Slaves’ During the WWII: Transported by Japan’s Merchant Ships” with Min Young Kim. Amerasia Journal. Vol. 29 No.3, 2003: 99-110. “Chosonjok: Koreans in China” Amerasia Journal. Vol. 29 No. 3, 2003.: 37-41. “What does it mean to be Korean today: One Hundred Years of Koreas in America and 3 More: Part I” Amerasia Journal. Vol. 29 No. 3, 2003: xix-xxvi. “Migook-Wei Injong Chabyul-Gwa DaeWae Jung Chaek: Racism and Foreign Policy” Critical Review of History. Seoul: Ryuk-Sa Bi-Pyong-Sa, Spring 2002: 322-340. “Diaspora Koreans in China: An Introduction.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 12, No.1, 2001: C1-5. “Korean Migration to Northeast China (Manchuria) 1869-1945: The Resistance Against Japanese Colonialism.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 12, No.1, 2001: C42-60. “Diaspora Koreans in the United States: An Introduction.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 11, No.2, 2000: U1-4. “Korean Kaleidoscope: An Overview of Korean Immigration to the U.S.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 11, No.2, 2000: U5-20. Guest editor, “Korean Americans in the Twenty-First Century: The Role of the Emerging Generation.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 10, No. 1&2, 1999. “The Post-LA Riot Korean American Community: Challenges and Prospects.” “Korean Americans in the Twenty-First Century: The Role of the Emerging Generation.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 10, No.1&2, Spring 1999. “Korean Americans.” In Violence in America: An Encyclopedia. Ronald Gottensman Editor in Chief. New York: Charles Scribner’s Son, 1999: 226-227. “Multiple Oppression Politics: A Strategic Approach to Biracial and Multiracial Coalitions.” (co-authored with Angie Chung) Social Justice. 1998: 80-100. "Toward Understanding Korean and African American Relations" OAH Magazine of History. Summer 1996: 67-71. "Building Cross-Cultural Coalitions: A Case Study of the Black-Korean Alliance and the Latino-Black Roundtable" (With Jeannette Diaz-Veizades) Ethnic and Racial Studies. Vol.19, No.3 July 1996: 680-700. "Korean Americans as Asian Americans: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives." Korean and Korean-American Studies Bulletin. Vol.6 No.2/3, Summer/Fall 1995: 34-44. "Jewish and Korean Merchants in African American Neighborhoods: 4 A Comparative Perspective." Amerasia Journal. Vol.19 No.2, 1993:5-21. "From Chicago to Los Angeles: Changing the Site of Race Relations" Amerasia Journal. Vol.19 No.2, 1993:1-3. "The Los Angeles 'Riots': A Korean American Perspective." Korean and Korean- American Studies Bulletin. Vol.4 No.3, Summer/Fall 1993: Symposium 147-172; Reprinted in Ho-Youn Kwon ed. Korean Americans: Conflict and Harmony. Chicago: North Park College and Theological Seminary, 1994: 159-176. "Jewish and Korean Merchants in African American Neighborhoods: A Comparative Perspective." Amerasia Journal. Vol.19 No.2, 1993:5-21. "Building Minority Coalitions: A Case Study of Korean and African Americans" Korea Journal of Population and Development. Seoul: Seoul National University Press. Vol.21 No.1 July 1992:37-56. "Anti-Americanism in South Korea" in California Sociologist. Eui-Young Yu and Terry R. Kandal (eds.) The Korean Peninsula in the Changing World Order. Vol.13, No.1-2. Winter/Summer 1990: 147-172. "Korean-Black Conflicts in Los Angeles: Perceptions and Realities." Korea Observer. Vol.XX, No.3 Autumn 1989:353-378. Reprinted in Hyung Chan Kim and Eun Ho Lee (eds.) Koreans in America: Dreams and Realities. Seoul: The Institute for Korean Studies, 1990:151-176. "Korean Community Politics in Los Angeles: The Impact of the Kwangju Uprising" Amerasia Journal. Vol.14, No.1 1988:51-65. Edited Special Issues of Journals “What does it mean to be Korean today: Part II. Amerasia Journal. Vol. 30. No. 1, 2004. “What does it mean to be Korean today: One Hundred Years of Koreas in America and More: Part I” Amerasia Journal. Vol. 29 No. 3, 2003: “The Korean Diaspora in the USA: Challenges and Evolution.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 11. No. 2, 2000. “Korean Americans in the Twenty-First Century: The Role of the Emerging Generation.” Korean and Korean American Studies Bulletin. Vol. 10, No. 1&2, 1999. 5 Book Chapters “Koreatown in Southern California and Non-profit Organizations. With Jae Hee Lee. Young Sang Lim and Dong Wan Chu eds. Koreatown and NPO. 2019. “Young Oak Kim Center for Korean American Studies” Young Sang Lim and Dong Wan Chu eds. Koreatown and NPO. 2019. “A Concise History of Korean Americans” In Mary Connor, Teaching East Asia: Korea Lessons and Resources for K-12 Classrooms. Los Angeles, California: National Korean Studies Seminar and Korean Cultural Center Los Angeles, 2017: 249-256. “Forward” Memoir of a Cashier: Korean Americans, Racism, and Riots” by Carol Park, Riverside, California: The Young Oak Kim Center for Korean American Studies, 2017: ix-xii. “Korean Diaspora in America” In Introduction Unsung Hero: The Story of Col. Young Oak Kim. Riverside, California: YOK Center for Korean American Studies, UC Riverside, 2011: III-XVIII. “Community in Transition: Korean American Empowerment in the 21st Century” In 2009 Civilization and Peace. Seoul: The Academy of Korean Studies, 2010: 97-120. “Korean Americans” with Barbara W. Kim. In Encyclopedia of Asian American Issues Today. Volume 1. Edited by Edith Wen-Chu Chen and Grace J. Yoo, Greenwood Press, 2010. “From Informal to Mainstream Economy: Korean Indoor Swapmeets in Los Angeles and Beyond” in Eui Young Yu ed.
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