Strengthening Education: Empowering Asian American Studies Conference
Item
Title
Strengthening Education: Empowering Asian American Studies Conference
Description
This video documents the conference, titled "Strengthening Education: Empowering Asian American Studies," that was hosted by the Coalition for the Revitalization of Asian American Studies at Hunter (CRAASH) on April 16, 2008, to address the need for support for Asian American Studies in higher education. At the conference, Asian American Studies Program inaugural director Peter Kwong credited CRAASH with saving Asian American studies at Hunter from extinction and called for more changes to be made still. He addressed the program's lack of full-time faculty and necessary dependence on adjunct labor, insufficient budget, and the administration's willful failure to understand the intellectual integrity of Asian American studies as a discipline. Other speakers and performers included Alvin Lau, Lily Qi, Anthony Advincula, Kendra Lee, and Sookyung Oh.
The Hunter College Asian American Studies Program (AASP) was established in 1993. As the only academic program in Asian American studies in the CUNY system, the AASP offers a minor in Asian American Studies and other resources and programming. The AASP supports scholars, artists, and activists advancing scholarship in the fields of Asian American studies and critical ethnic studies and serves as a resource for New York City's Asian American communities. In 2006, the program was at risk of being cut due to a lack of funding. Students formed the Coalition for the Revitalization of Asian American Studies at Hunter (CRAASH) and saved the program within a year. CRAASH is now a student-run club that continues to advocate for the AASP.
The Hunter College Asian American Studies Program (AASP) was established in 1993. As the only academic program in Asian American studies in the CUNY system, the AASP offers a minor in Asian American Studies and other resources and programming. The AASP supports scholars, artists, and activists advancing scholarship in the fields of Asian American studies and critical ethnic studies and serves as a resource for New York City's Asian American communities. In 2006, the program was at risk of being cut due to a lack of funding. Students formed the Coalition for the Revitalization of Asian American Studies at Hunter (CRAASH) and saved the program within a year. CRAASH is now a student-run club that continues to advocate for the AASP.
Date
April 16, 2008
Language
English
Publisher
Asian American/Asian Research Institute (AAARI)
Rights
Public Domain
Original Format
Digital Video
Duration
01:12:05
Relation
10352
Source
Asian American/Asian Research Institute (AAARI)
Creator
Asian American/Asian Research Institute (AAARI)
Asian American/Asian Research Institute (AAARI). “Strengthening Education: Empowering Asian American Studies Conference”. 10352. Asian American/Asian Research Institute (AAARI), CUNY DIGITAL HISTORY ARCHIVE, accessed March 10, 2026, https://stephenz.tailc22a4b.ts.net/s/cdha/item/1517
Time Periods
2010-2020 From OWS to Covid-19
Subjects
Activism
Asian American Studies
CUNY Administration
Diversity
Ethnic, Black or Latino Studies
Student Organizations
Alvin Lau
Anthony Advincula
Asian American Studies
Asian American Studies Program (AASP)
Coalition for the Revitalization of Asian American Studies at Hunter (CRAASH)
Hunter College
Kendra Lee
Lily Qi
Peter Kwong
Sookyung Oh
Student Activism