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Article
Interracial Coalition Building: A Filipino Lawyer in a Black-White Community
Dickinson Law Review
  • Victor C. Romero, Penn State Law
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Disciplines
Abstract

The United States is in the midst of a political and cultural war around race and demography that goes to the heart of America’s self-definition as a nation of immigrants. Heeding Eric Yamamoto’s four-part prescription for interracial cooperation via the conceptual, the performative, the material, and the reflexive, this Essay draws from the author’s own experience as an Asian- American volunteer attempting to serve and lead a traditionally African-American civil rights organization in a predominantly white, rural town in Pennsylvania. Three lessons emerge from this experience. When volunteering, it is important to answer the call to serve even when in doubt; lead by serving and listening to others; and respect the coalition and trust the process.

Citation Information
Victor C. Romero. "Interracial Coalition Building: A Filipino Lawyer in a Black-White Community" Dickinson Law Review Vol. 127 (2023) p. 767
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/victor_romero/53/