The rise and fall of America's concentration camp law : civil liberties debates from the internment to McCarthyism and the radical 1960s

Bibliographic Information

The rise and fall of America's concentration camp law : civil liberties debates from the internment to McCarthyism and the radical 1960s

Masumi Izumi

(Asian American history and culture series)

Temple University Press, 2019

  • : cloth

Other Title

Japanese American internment and the Emergency Detention Act (Title II of the Internal Security Act of 1950), 1941-1971 : balancing internal security and civil liberties in the United States

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Note

Based on author's thesis (doctoral--Doshisha University, 2004) issued under title: Japanese American internment and the Emergency Detention Act (Title II of the Internal Security Act of 1950), 1941-1971 : balancing internal security and civil liberties in the United States

Bibliography: p. [233]-246

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Emergency Detention Act, Title II of the Internal Security Act of 1950, is the only law in American history to legalize preventive detention. It restricted the freedom of a certain individual or a group of individuals based on actions that may be taken that would threaten the security of a nation or of a particular area. Yet the Act was never enforced before it was repealed in 1971. Masumi Izumi links the Emergency Detention Act with Japanese American wartime incarceration in her cogent study, The Rise and Fall of America's Concentration Camp Law. She dissects the entangled discourses of race, national security, and civil liberties between 1941 and 1971 by examining how this historical precedent generated "the concentration camp law" and expanded a ubiquitous regime of surveillance in McCarthyist America. Izumi also shows how political radicalism grew as a result of these laws. Japanese Americas were instrumental in forming grassroots social movements that worked to repeal Title II. The Rise and Fall of America's Concentration Camp Law is a timely study in this age of insecurity where issues of immigration, race, and exclusion persist.

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