If AAPI Functions More Like a Coalition,

If AAPI was never a naturally unified community, then its central challenge may not be whether Asian Americans are “united enough,” but whether highly different groups can sustain meaningful cooperation despite their differences.

Why Are Asian Americans So Often “Invisible” in American History?

Asian Americans have never been absent from American history — they have simply remained at the edges of its dominant narrative. From the “perpetual foreigner” stereotype to the “model minority” myth, and from Black–white racial frameworks to fragmented immigration histories, Asian Americans have often existed in a paradoxical position: deeply present, yet rarely fully seen.