AAS Call for Proposals

Seeking Panelists: Refugees and "Their Version" of Specific Events from "Their Homeland's" History

  • 1.  Seeking Panelists: Refugees and "Their Version" of Specific Events from "Their Homeland's" History

    Posted 07-08-2023 11:28 AM

    Hi all.


    My name is Dr. P. Mike Rattanasengchanh and I am an Assistant Professor of Asian and US history at Midwestern State University. 


    I am seeking 2-3 others to submit a panel to the next AAS conference. 


    This is just a rough abstract below.


    My paper will be on my research with first and second generation Lao-Americans, specifically on how members within the refugee community have diverging memory and narratives of Lao history and its civil war during the Second Indochina war. Though it is not new that first and second generation immigrants, like the Lao, are not same due to differing assimilation experiences, their understanding of key moments in Lao history has shown a growing distance between older and younger groups. Through oral interviews and primary and secondary source research at several archives and libraries, older Lao-Americans view the U.S. bombing of Laos as necessary and see the American intervention as justifiable due to outside invasion and the request of the Royal Lao Government. The Lao born in the United States and some of the 1.5 generation disagree with their elders, criticizing the U.S. involvement and highlighting the resulting destruction caused by what they see as indiscriminate use of violence. This diverging memory or narrative has carried over into domestic politics being one factor in their political decision-making process. Most of the first generation lean towards the Republican Party, while the younger Lao-Americans are more liberal in their political views and vote more for the Democrat candidates. This is an important story about competing historical narratives that endure across generations and that can often lead to further misunderstandings within refugee communities who are already struggling to feel accepted in the United States.


    Please let me know if you are interested or know someone that might be.


    Best.


    P. Mike Rattanasengchanh, Ph.D.
    Assistant Professor of History
    Midwestern State University
    TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY SYSTEM