35-year-old Asian American studies program given department status

Correction appended

Thirty-five years after the founding of the Asian American
Studies Center, faculty, staff and students will be celebrating
this landmark anniversary and its recent approval as its own
department during a ceremony Thursday.

From the first Asian American studies course offered in 1969 to
a master’s degree program and specialization established in
1976, the formerly interdepartmental program was approved in
August, two years after the proposal was submitted.

UCLA is the first major research university to have a department
of Asian American studies and is now eligible for the resources and
funding available to a department, said Don Nakanishi, director of
the Asian American Studies Center.

Nakanishi said many administrators, including the chancellor,
expressed their support for departmentalization, agreeing that the
department had outlived its interdepartmental status.

“Over time we have produced more scholars and writers for
the field than any other university,” Nakanishi said.

Before Asian American studies became a department, it was the
largest interdepartmental program on campus, offering 60 classes a
year, a summer program in Hawaii, an undergraduate major, a minor
and a master’s program.

Nakanishi estimated there are 3,000 students who take classes
through Asian American studies classes, most of whom are
undergraduates.

He said the new department will continue to be interdisciplinary
and work with the community, in addition to being more influential
on a national level.

“This will allow us to have even greater impact in terms
of future national development of Asian American studies,” he
said.

Professor King-kok Cheung, a professor in both the English and
Asian American studies departments, said the new department status
could allow the program to establish a doctoral program and hire
faculty that would be fully affiliated with the department.

Currently, all Asian American studies faculty are affiliated
with other departments on campus, except Professor Robert Nakamura,
who is expected to fully devote himself to Asian American
studies.

Though the center will continue to exist and work closely with
the department, Cheung added that the department will feel more
like a community than the interdepartmental program.

“As opposed to always having to go to a different
department to see their advisor, (students) will have more of a
sense of home,” she said.

Ajit Mal, a professor of Engineering and member of the Academic
Senate, worked on the committee that approved the department and
said the senate was supportive overall.

“Academically, they are doing extremely well. The programs
are excellent,” he said. “I think it’s a good
thing for the university to have such a program.”

Nakanishi attributed the long two-year approval process to the
attention devoted by faculty governing committees two years ago to
the semester or quarter system debate.

“They just put everything on a back burner,” he
said, referring to faculty governing committees.

Nakanishi said he saw approval for the department as symbolic
evidence that the field had established its roots in the American
community and in higher education.

“(Higher education), for so long and throughout so much of
our history had excluded us or had not really provided us with
equal access or representation, has now begun to afford us that
equal opportunity,” he said.

Correction: Wednesday, October 20,
2004

In “35-year-old Asian American studies program given
department status” (News, Oct 19), the program has existed
for 26 years, while the Asian American Studies Center is 35 years
old.

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