Asian American Law Journal

The <b><i>Asian American Law Journal</i></b> (AALJ) is one of only two law journals in the United States focusing on Asian American communities in its publication agenda. Known as the Asian Law Journal until 2007, AALJ was first published in October 1993 in a joint publication with the California Law Review. AALJ's first independent issue was published in May 1994.

List of Papers (Total 248)

Asian Americans and Affirmative Action—Again

By Frank H. Wu, Published on 01/01/19

Interest Convergence, Negative Action, and SFFA vs. Harvard

By Julie Park, Published on 01/01/19

Confronting Misinformation through Social Science Research: SFFA v. Harvard

By OiYan A. Poon, Liliana M. Garces, Janelle Wong, et al., Published on 01/01/19

The Art of War: How Japanese Internment Art Was Saved from Auction and Conserved for Posterity

Part I of this Article describes the WWII Japanese American evacuation from the West Coast of the United States, depicts the harsh living conditions of the internment camps, and explains the context in which the artifacts were created. It also introduces the controversial attempt to sell these artifacts. Part II discusses the Heart Mountain Wyoming Foundation Board’s (Heart...

Passion and the Asian American Legal Scholar

By Robert S. Chang, Published on 01/01/96

Neil Gotanda and the Critical Legal Studies Movement

By Gary Minda, Published on 01/01/97