We, the undersigned faculty of the UCLA Asian American Studies Department, express our outrage over the series of events that have occurred over the past week, including the university administration’s declaring of the peaceful student protest “unlawful” and “unauthorized” and the subsequent failure to protect UCLA students within the encampment from violent attacks from outside agitators on multiple nights, culminating on the night of April 30, 2024.
We also denounce Chancellor Gene Block’s decision to call in the LAPD, CHP, and LA Sheriff’s Department to disband the Palestine Solidarity Encampment on the night of May 1, 2024, which resulted in the use of rubber bullets, batons, and flashbang grenades against our students, as well as the detainment and arrests of at least 200 peaceful protestors. Last night our campus felt like a militarized war zone, akin to, but by no means equivalent to, what Palestinians have endured for decades. We object in the strongest possible terms to all of these actions, which are not reflective of the values of our campus community and of academic freedom more generally.
As faculty, our utmost commitment is to the safety and well-being of our students. We strongly condemn the attacks on our students, from outside agitators as well as UC-condoned police forces. We echo UCLA Faculty for Justice in Palestine’s demand for full legal, academic and disciplinary amnesty for all protesters. We call upon UCLA to stand up for the safety and the rights of the campus community by honoring the students’ constitutional right to peacefully protest without fear of punishment. We insist upon a vote of no confidence in Chancellor Block for endangering our students.
Asian American Studies is rooted in a rich tradition of student protest against war, imperialism, racism, settler colonialism, and police violence in the United States, its territories, and abroad. The Palestine Solidarity Encampment is part of a longer history of student activism at UCLA, which includes protests against the US War in Southeast Asia and an international campaign that boycotted the apartheid state in South Africa. Like our students, we too are horrified and grief-stricken by the rising death toll in Gaza. We echo and uplift our students’ demands that UCLA disclose its investments and divest from the US-backed genocide against Palestinians.
Asian American Studies is indebted to student voices and protests. Given our history, we stand committed to the First Amendment right of free speech and the right for our students to exercise their free speech, safely and without fear of retaliation. We are horrified by the acts of violence committed against our students who are continuing a long legacy of demanding social change. We support student-led efforts that advance human rights and social justice.
Signed,
Victor Bascara, Associate Professor
Lucy Burns, Associate Professor
Keith L. Camacho, Professor and Chair
Jolie Chea, Assistant Professor
King-Kok Cheung, Professor Emeritus
Jennifer Jihye Chun, Associate Professor
Evyn Lê Espiritu Gandhi, Associate Professor
Grace Kyungwon Hong, Professor
Nour Joudah, Assistant Professor
Purnima Mankekar, Professor
Valerie Matsumoto, Professor
Natalie Masuoka, Associate Professor
Thu-huong Nguyen-vo, Professor
Kyeyoung Park, Professor
Loubna Qutami, Assistant Professor
Cindy C. Sangalang, Assistant Professor
Renee Tajima-Peña, Professor
Karen Umemoto, Professor
Lee Ann Wang, Assistant Professor
In accordance with Regents Policy on Public and Discretionary Statements by Academic Units, this statement should not be taken as a position of the University, all members of the Department, or the campus as a whole.
New Faculty Book: The Violence of Protection by Lee Ann S. Wang
/in NewsWendy Fujinami, Department Manager, awarded 2025 Thomas E. Lifka Staff Excellence Award
/in NewsJoin our department in congratulating our outstanding Department Manager, Wendy Fujinami, who was recently awarded a 2025 Thomas E. Lifka Staff Excellence Award! Read the full article here: https://socialsciences.ucla.edu/meet-uclas-2025-thomas-e-lifka-staff-excellence-award-winners/. Congratulations Wendy!
‘Our stories matter, our voices matter’
/in NewsGraduating AAS major, Ryan Horio (Class of 2025), was recently featured in UCLA Newsroom in which he reflects on his journey with Asian American Studies, his goal to resolve health inequities, and the intersection of social activism and medicine.
Link to article: https://newsroom.ucla.edu/stories/ryan-horio-research-physician-activist-commencement-2025
Angel Trazo, MA ’20, featured in Books by Bruins
/in NewsUCLA Asian American Studies alumni Angel Trazo, MA ’20, is featured in Books by Bruins for their book “We Are Inspiring: The Stories of 32 Inspirational Asian American Women” (2019). “We Are Inspiring” brings to life the stories of Asian American women from different communities. Trazo wrote the book with the goal of preventing the erasure of Asian Americans as an integral part of American history. Aimed at children ages 10 and over, the book covers 32 inspirational women including scientists, artists, actresses, comedians, judges and Olympians. Trazo is an author, illustrator and grad student based in the Bay Area. She holds a master’s degree in Asian American Studies from UCLA. This is her debut children’s book.
Find the book here. Find the Books by Bruins website here.
Jean-Paul deGuzman featured in Food & Wine
/in NewsUCLA Asian American Studies lecturer Jean-Paul Contreras deGuzman explains that the drink is “a quintessentially Asian North American story” that “speaks to the trans-Pacific circulation of culture and cuisine that has lasted for generations.” Read the full article here.
Asian American Studies Department Solidarity Statement
/in UncategorizedWe, the undersigned faculty of the UCLA Asian American Studies Department, express our outrage over the series of events that have occurred over the past week, including the university administration’s declaring of the peaceful student protest “unlawful” and “unauthorized” and the subsequent failure to protect UCLA students within the encampment from violent attacks from outside agitators on multiple nights, culminating on the night of April 30, 2024.
We also denounce Chancellor Gene Block’s decision to call in the LAPD, CHP, and LA Sheriff’s Department to disband the Palestine Solidarity Encampment on the night of May 1, 2024, which resulted in the use of rubber bullets, batons, and flashbang grenades against our students, as well as the detainment and arrests of at least 200 peaceful protestors. Last night our campus felt like a militarized war zone, akin to, but by no means equivalent to, what Palestinians have endured for decades. We object in the strongest possible terms to all of these actions, which are not reflective of the values of our campus community and of academic freedom more generally.
As faculty, our utmost commitment is to the safety and well-being of our students. We strongly condemn the attacks on our students, from outside agitators as well as UC-condoned police forces. We echo UCLA Faculty for Justice in Palestine’s demand for full legal, academic and disciplinary amnesty for all protesters. We call upon UCLA to stand up for the safety and the rights of the campus community by honoring the students’ constitutional right to peacefully protest without fear of punishment. We insist upon a vote of no confidence in Chancellor Block for endangering our students.
Asian American Studies is rooted in a rich tradition of student protest against war, imperialism, racism, settler colonialism, and police violence in the United States, its territories, and abroad. The Palestine Solidarity Encampment is part of a longer history of student activism at UCLA, which includes protests against the US War in Southeast Asia and an international campaign that boycotted the apartheid state in South Africa. Like our students, we too are horrified and grief-stricken by the rising death toll in Gaza. We echo and uplift our students’ demands that UCLA disclose its investments and divest from the US-backed genocide against Palestinians.
Asian American Studies is indebted to student voices and protests. Given our history, we stand committed to the First Amendment right of free speech and the right for our students to exercise their free speech, safely and without fear of retaliation. We are horrified by the acts of violence committed against our students who are continuing a long legacy of demanding social change. We support student-led efforts that advance human rights and social justice.
Signed,
Victor Bascara, Associate Professor
Lucy Burns, Associate Professor
Keith L. Camacho, Professor and Chair
Jolie Chea, Assistant Professor
King-Kok Cheung, Professor Emeritus
Jennifer Jihye Chun, Associate Professor
Evyn Lê Espiritu Gandhi, Associate Professor
Grace Kyungwon Hong, Professor
Nour Joudah, Assistant Professor
Purnima Mankekar, Professor
Valerie Matsumoto, Professor
Natalie Masuoka, Associate Professor
Thu-huong Nguyen-vo, Professor
Kyeyoung Park, Professor
Loubna Qutami, Assistant Professor
Cindy C. Sangalang, Assistant Professor
Renee Tajima-Peña, Professor
Karen Umemoto, Professor
Lee Ann Wang, Assistant Professor
In accordance with Regents Policy on Public and Discretionary Statements by Academic Units, this statement should not be taken as a position of the University, all members of the Department, or the campus as a whole.
Meet Kelly Fong
/in NewsCheck out Voyage LA’s piece highlighting one of AASD’s continuing lecturers, Dr. Kelly Fong! She shares on her background, experience in the fields of Archeology and Asian American Studies, and her current projects.
Students Rising Above: Emily Taing
/in Alumni Spotlight, NewsCheck out CBS Bay Area’s profile of one of our amazing alumni, Emily Taing! Students Rising Above: Emily Taing
2022-23 Don T. Nakanishi Award for Outstanding Engaged Scholarship Awarding
/in NewsThe Asian American Studies Center at UCLA awarded this year’s Don T. Nakanishi Award for Outstanding Engaged Scholarship to graduate student Brian Kohaya and undergraduate student Steven Tran. Congratulations to the recipients!
Read more about the award recipients here.
AASD Graduate Students Recipients of CSW Awards
/in NewsOn May 19, 2023, the Center for the Study of Women | Streisand Center held their annual awards luncheon at the UCLA Botanical Garden to celebrate the recipients of faculty, graduate, and undergraduate awards. Congratulations to the recipients, including Asian American Studies faculty Nguyễn-võ Thu-hương, and MA students Trinity Gabato and Pallavi Rudraraju.
Read more about the awardees