On February 19, 1942, following the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor
and Japanese Army successes in the Pacific, President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt signed a fateful order. In the name of security, Executive
Order 9066 allowed for the summary removal of Japanese aliens and
American citizens of Japanese descent from their West Coast homes and
their incarceration under guard in camps. Amid the numerous histories
and memoirs devoted to this shameful event, FDR's contributions have
been seen as negligible. Now, using Roosevelt's own writings, his
advisors' letters and diaries, and internal government documents, Greg
Robinson reveals the president's central role in making and
implementing the internment and examines not only what the president
did but why. Robinson traces FDR's outlook back to his formative
years, and to the early twentieth century's racialist view of ethnic
Japanese in America as immutably "foreign" and threatening. These
prejudicial sentiments, along with his constitutional philosophy and
leadership style, contributed to Roosevelt's approval of the
unprecedented mistreatment of American citizens. His hands-on
participation and interventions were critical in determining the
nature, duration, and consequences of the administration's internment
policy. By Order of the President attempts to explain how a great
humanitarian leader and his advisors, who were fighting a war to
preserve democracy, could have implemented such a profoundly unjust
and undemocratic policy toward their own people. It reminds us of the
power of a president's beliefs to influence and determine public
policy and of the need for citizen vigilance to protect the rights of
all against potential abuses.
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FDR and the Internment of Japanese Americans
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674042803
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter