Bibliography
Hirabayashi, L.R. "Foreword." Barbed Voices: Oral History, Resistance, and the World War II Japanese American Social Disaster, Arthur A.Hansen
"Nikkei in the Americas" book series, University Press of Colorado (forthcoming, 2018).
Hirabayashi, L.R., Richard Katsuda, Suzy Katsuda, Kathy Masaoka; Kay Ochi, and Janice Iwanaga Yen, editors. NCRR: The Grassroots Struggle for Japanese American Redress and Reparations. Los Angeles: UCLA Asian American Studies Center Press, 2018.
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Asian American Small Business Formations: From Accommodation to Innovation," in Finding A Path Forward: Asian American Pacific Islander National Historic Landmarks Theme Study, Franklin Odo, ed. Washington, D.C.: National Park Service, 2017:
https://www.nps.gov/subjects/tellingallamericansstories/asianpacificislanderthemestudy.htm
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Nikkei/JA/Latino/Latina: Structure and Ideologies of Racialized Identities in the Americas." Transpacific Borderlands: The Art of Japanese Diaspora in Lima, Los Angeles, Mexico City, and Sao Paulo, Emily Anderson, ed.. Los Angeles: Japanese American National Museum (2017).
Hirabayashi, L.R., Conjecturing Communities: The Ebbs and Flows of Japanese America. Pan Japan (special issue), Vol. 12, Nos. 1 and 2 (Spring/Fall, 2016).
Hirabayashi, L.R. (with M. Alquizola, and J. Cabusao), "The Bulosan Files" Another Layer in a Continuing Dialogue." In Jeffrey A. Cabusao, ed., Writer in Exile/Writer in Revolt (2016).
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Valorizing the Vernacular," Foreword, Relocating Authority: Writing to Redress Mass Incarceration, Mira Shimabukuro. "Nikkei in the Americas" book series, University Press of Colorado (2015).
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Incarceration," Keywords For Asian American Studies, Cathy J. Schlund-Vials, et al., eds., New York: NYU Press (2015)
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Thinking/Experiencing Mutuality," Mutuality: Anthropology's Changing Terms of Engagement, Roger Sanjek, ed. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press (2015)
Hirabayashi, L.R., (with Marilyn C. Alquizola), "Carlos Bulosan on Writing: The Role of Letters." Kritika Kultura 23[2014]:168-188.
http://kritikakultura.ateneo.net/images/pdf/KK23/Paginated/23%20Alquizola%20Hirabayashi%20168-188.pdf
Hirabayashi, L.R., (with Marilyn C. Alquizola), "Introduction," to America Is In the Heart by Carlos Bulosan. Seattle: University of Washington Press (reissued 2014 edition).
Hirabayashi, L.R. "Afterword." Starting From Loomis, by H. Kashiwagi. Boulder: University Press of Colorado (2013).
Hirabayashi, L.R. (with James A. Hirabayashi), eds. Gordon Hirabayashi, A Principled Stand: The Story of Gordon Hirabayashi v. United States. Seattle: University of Washington Press, (2013).
Hirabayashi, L.R., (with Brian Niiya; Penny Nakatsu), "In Memorandum: James Akira Hirabayashi, 1926-2012" Amerasia Journal 39[1](2013):130-134.
Hirabayashi, L.R., (with Marilyn C. Alquizola) "Carlos Bulosan's Final Defiant Acts: Achievements During the McCarthy Era." Amerasia Journal 38(3)[2012]:29-50.
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Accused of the Crime, Doing the Time: Notes on Gordon Hirabayashi, 1943-1945." Seattle Journal of Social Justice 11(1)[Summer, 2012]:27-40.
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Government Photographs of the WRA Camps and Resettlement," Densho Encyclopedia 2012 [on-line];
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Government%20photography%20of%20the%20WRA%20Camps%20and%20Resettlement/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Richard S. Nishimoto," Densho Encyclopedia 2012 [on-line];
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Richard%20S.%20Nishimoto/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Tamie Tsuchiyama," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Tamie%20Tsuchiyama/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Francis L. Stewart," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Francis%20L.%20Stewart/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Thomas W. Parker," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Thomas%20W.%20Parker/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Takashi ‘Bud’ Aoyama," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Takashi%20%22Bud%22%20Aoyama/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Hikaru Iwasaki," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Hikaru%20Iwasaki/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Charles E. Mace," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Charles%20E.%20Mace/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Gretchen Van Tassel," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Gretchen%20Van%20Tassel/
Hirabayashi, L.R., "Toshio Yatsushiro," Densho Encyclopedia [on-line] 2012;
http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Toshio%20Yatsushiro/
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Alquizola, M.C. "Appropriating 'Inappropriate Resources': The Significance of FOI/PA Requests for Asian American Biography." Journal of American Ethnic History, Vol 32, No. 4 (2012): pp. 56-68.
Hirabayashi, L.R. "Afterword." The House on Lemon Street, by M. Rawitsch. Boulder: University Press of Colorado (2012).
Hirabayashi, L.R. "Comments on the Afternoon Session, October 13," Japanese and Asian Americans: Racializations and Their Resistances, Yasuko Takezawa, ed. Kyoto: Institute for Research in the Humanities (February, 2012), 121-126.
Hirabayashi, L.R. "Educational Mandate," Speaking Out For Personal Justice: Site Summaries of Testimonies and Witness Registry from the U.S. Commission on Wartime Relocation & Internment of Civilians Hearings CWRIC. Aiko Herzig-Yoshinaga, and Marjorie Lee, eds. Los Angeles: UCLA Asian American Studies Center Press, (2012).
Hirabayashi, L.R. "Getting To Know Gordon." Inspire [the member magazine of the Japanese American National Museum], (Spring, 2012): pp. 12-13.
Hirabayashi, L.R., with Marilyn Alquizola. "Carlos Bulosan's Laughter of My Father: Adding Feminist and Class Perspectives to the 'Casebook of Resistance.'" Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, Vol. 32, No. 3 (2011): pp. 64-91.
Hirabayashi, L.R. (guest editor). Neglected Legacies: Japanese American Women and the Redress/Reparations Movement, special issue of the journal Pan Japan (Spring/Fall 2011) 7:1 and 2: i-277.
Hirabayashi, L.R. "Introduction." Neglected Legacies: Japanese American Women and the Redress/Reparations Movement, special issue of the journal Pan Japan (Spring/Fall 2011) 7:1 and 2: vi-xx.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “A Long Time Coming: Why the Nisei graduation ceremonies are so moving and their significance to the Nikkei of today.” Rafu Shimpo, (June 22, 2010): pp. 6 and 8.
Hirabayashi, L.R. Wakako Yamauchi’s “The Sensei”: Exploring the Ethos of Japanese American Resettlement. Journal of American Ethnic History 29[2], (Winter 2010): pp. 55 – 61.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Imagined Futures: Opening Possibilities for the Construction of Culture and Community.” The Cultural Museum 2.0: Engaging Diverse Audiences in America. Los Angeles, CA: Japanese American National Museum, (August 2009): pp. 49 – 53.
Hirabayashi, L.R., with Shimada, K. Japanese American Resettlement Through the Lens: Hikaru Iwasaki And the WRA’s Photographic Section, 1943-1945. [Photographs by Hikaru Carl Iwasaki. Foreword written by Norman Y. Mineta.] Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado, (2009): 221 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Introduction.” Images of America: Japanese Americans of the South Bay, by D. A. Sato. Arcadia, CA: Arcadia Publishing, (2009): pp: 7 – 8.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Sanjek, R. “American Anthropologists and Mass Incarceration: A Question of Ethics.” Anthropology News, 48[9], (December 2007): pp. 5 – 6.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Japanese American Resettlement: Through the Lens.” JANM’s Discover Nikkei website, (Feb 22, 2007).
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Nikkei in the Americas: New Questions, New Perspectives.” JANM’s Discover Nikkei website, (Feb 8, 2007).
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Shimada, K. “Japanese Americans and the War in Colorado.” [Review of Nikkei Amerikajin To Senso: Rokuji Nego No Shijutsu: Kororado Nihonjin Monogatari, by E. Imada, and other Japanese-language publications] Journal of American Ethnic History 27[1], (Fall 2007): pp. 73 – 77.
Hirabayashi, L.R. and, Kikumura-Yano, A. “Japanese Latin Americans During World War II: A Reconsideration.” Japanese Diasporas: Unsung Pasts, Conflicting Presents, and Uncertain Futures. Nobuko Adachi, et al., eds. New York: Routledge, (2006): pp. 159-171.
a. Japanese-language translation in Japanese Diasporas, (2008).
Kikumura-Yano, A., Hirabayashi, L.R., and Hirabayashi, J.A., eds. Common Ground: The Japanese American National Museum and the Culture of Collaborations. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, (2005): 227 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R., Kikumura-Yano, A., and Hirabayashi, J.A. “Conclusion.” Common Ground: The Japanese American National Museum and the Culture of Collaborations. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, (2005): pp. 207 – 211.
Kikumura-Yano, A., Hirabayashi, J.A., and Hirabayashi, L.R. “Building Community Through Global Research.” Common Ground: The Japanese American National Museum and the Culture of Collaborations. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, (2005): pp. 195 – 206.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Part II: Collaborative Dimension at the Local and National Levels.” Akemi Kikumura-Yano, Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, and James A. Hirabayashi, eds. Common Ground: The Japanese American National Museum and the Culture of Collaborations. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, (2005): pp. 85 – 87.
Kikumura-Yano, A., Hirabayashi, L.R., and Hirabayashi, J.A. “Preface.” Common Ground: The Japanese American National Museum and the Culture of Collaborations. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, (2005): pp. vii – viii.
Xing, J., and Hirabayashi, L.R., eds. Reversing the Lens: Ethnicity, Race, Gender, and Sexuality Through Film. Boulder, CO: The University of Colorado Press, (2003): 270 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Alquizola, M.C. “The Issue of Reinscription: Pedagogical Responses.” Reversing the Lens: Ethnicity, Race, Gender, and Sexuality Through Film. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi and Jun Xing, eds. Boulder, CO: The University of Colorado Press, (2003): pp. 241 – 247.
Alquizola, M.C., and Hirabayashi, L.R. “Confronting Gender Stereotypes of Asian American Women: Slaying the Dragon.” Reversing the Lens: Ethnicity, Race, Gender, and Sexuality Through Film. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi and Jun Xing, eds. Boulder, CO: The University of Colorado Press, (2003): pp.154 – 168.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Xing, J. “Introduction.” Reversing the Lens: Ethnicity, Race, Gender, and Sexuality Through Film. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi and Jun Xing, eds. Boulder, CO: The University of Colorado Press, (2003): pp. 3 – 10.
Xing, J., and Hirabayashi, L.R. “Preface.” Reversing the Lens: Ethnicity, Race, Gender, and Sexuality Through Film. Boulder, CO: The University of Colorado Press, (2003): pp. xiii – xiv.
Hirabayashi, L.R., Kikumura-Yano, A., and Hirabayashi, J.A, eds. New Worlds, New Lives: Globalization and People of Japanese Descent in the Americas and from Latin America in Japan. Stanford: Stanford University Press, (2002): 358 pp. (Lane Ryo Hirabayashi served as senior editor).
a. Kikumura-Yano, A., Hirabayashi, L.R., and Hirabayashi, J.A., eds. Nikkeijin to Gurobarlizeshon: Hokubei, Nanbei, Nihon. Imin Kenkyukai. Kyoto: Jimbun Shoin, (2006): 532 pp.
* Japanese-language translation of New Worlds, New Lives.
Hirabayashi, L.R., Kikumura-Yano, A., and Hirabayashi, J. “Retrospect and Prospects.” New Worlds, New Lives: Globalization and People of Japanese Descent in the Americas and from Latin America in Japan. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Akemi Kikumura-Yano, and James Aikira Hirabayashi, eds. Stanford: Stanford University Press, (2002): pp. 333 – 348.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Pathways to Power: Comparative Perspectives on the Emergence of Nikkei Ethnic Political Traditions.” New Worlds, New Lives: Globalization and People of Japanese Descent in the Americas and from Latin AmericaJapan. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Akemi Kikumura-Yano, and James Aikira Hirabayashi, eds. Stanford: Stanford University Press, (2002), pp. 159 – 178.
Hirabayashi, L.R., Kikumura-Yano, A., and Hirabayashi, J. “The Impact of Contemporary Globalization on Nikkei Identities.” New Worlds, New Lives: Globalization and People of Japanese Descent in the Americas and from Latin America in Japan. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Akemi Kikumura-Yano, and James Aikira Hirabayashi, eds. Stanford: Stanford University Press, (2002): pp. 19 – 27.
Hirabayashi, L.R., Kikumura-Yano, A., and Hirabayashi, J. “Preface.” New Worlds, New Lives: Globalization and People of Japanese Descent in the Americas and from Latin America in Japan. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Akemi Kikumura-Yano, and James Aikira Hirabayashi, eds. Stanford: Stanford University Press, (2002): pp. xiii – xx.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Community Destroyed? Assessing the Impact of the Loss of Community on Japanese Americans during World War II.” Re/Collecting Asian America. Josephene Lee, et al., eds. Philadelphia: Temple University, (2002): pp. 94 – 107.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Culture, Power, and Truth: A Virtual Interview with Professor Renato Rosaldo." Amerasia Journal 28[2], (2002): pp.108 – 127.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Reconsidering Transculturation and Power.” Asian American Policy Review 9, (2000): pp. 105-123.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “How a Death Threat Became an Opportunity to Connect with My Students.” Pacific Citizen, (May 21-June 3, 1999): p. 10.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Teaching Diverse Students: A View from Asian American Studies.” Series XIII: On Diversity in Teaching and Learning. Sponsored by: The Faculty Teaching Excellence Program, Office of Academic Affairs, University of Colorado at Boulder, (January 1999).
Collier, M., and Hirabayashi, L.R. “Resources for Innovation / Excellence in Teaching: A Select, Annotated Bibliography.” Teaching Asian America: Diversity & the Problem of Community. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, ed. Lanham, MD: Roman and Littlefield Publishers, (1998): pp. 249 – 251.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Introduction.” Teaching Asian America: Diversity & the Problem of Community. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, ed. Lanham, MD: Roman and Littlefield Publishers, (1998): pp. 1 – 12.
Hirabayashi, L.R, ed. Teaching Asian America: Diversity & the Problem of Community. Lanham, MD: Roman and Littlefield Publishers, (1998): 266 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Re-Reading the Archives: Intersections of Ethnography, Biography, and Autobiography in Japanese American Evacuation and Resettlement.” Peace and Change 23[2], (April 1998): pp. 167 – 182.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Preface.” Asian America Through the Lens: History, Representations, and Identity. Jun Xing, ed. Walnut Creek, CA: Alta Mira Press, (1998): pp. 10 – 12.
Altamirano, T., and Hirabayashi, L.R. Migrants, Regional Identities and Latin American Cities. Foreword written by Stephen D. Glazier. Teófilo Altamirano and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, eds. Society for Latin American Anthropology Publication Series. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association (1997): 180 pp.
Altamirano, T., and Hirabayashi, L.R. “Conclusions.” Migrants, Regional Identities and Latin American Cities. Teófilo Altamirano and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, eds. Society for Latin American Anthropology Publication Series. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association (1997): pp. 167 – 177.
Albo, X. “La Paz/Chukiyawu: The Two Faces of a City.” Translation by Lane Ryo Hirabayashi. Migrants, Regional Identities and Latin American Cities. Teófilo Altamirano and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, eds. Society for Latin American Anthropology Publication Series, Washington D.C.: American Anthropological Association (1997): pp. 111 – 148.
Carrasco, M., H. “Indians of the Sierra in Quito and Guayaquil: Interethnic Relations and the Urbanization of Migrants.” Translation by Lane Ryo Hirabayashi. Migrants, Regional Identities and Latin American Cities. Teófilo Altamirano and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, eds. Society for Latin American Anthropology Publication Series, Washington D.C.: American Anthropological Association (1997): pp. 95 – 110.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “The Politicization of Regional Identities among Mountain Zapotec Migrants in Mexico City.” Migrants, Regional Identities and Latin American Cities. Teófilo Altamirano and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, eds. Society for Latin American Anthropology Publication Series, Washington D.C.: American Anthropological Association, (1997): pp. 49 – 66.
Altamirano, T., Hirabayashi, L.R. “The Construction of Regional Identities in Urban Latin America” Migrants, Regional Identities and Latin American Cities. Teófilo Altamirano and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, eds. Society for Latin American Anthropology Publication Series, Washington D.C.: American Anthropological Association, (1997): pp. 7 – 23.
Altamirano, T., and Hirabayashi, L.R. “Preface.” Migrants, Regional Identities and Latin American Cities. Teófilo Altamirano and Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, eds. Society for Latin American Anthropology Publication Series. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association (1997): pp. xi – xiii.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Asian American Studies and Institutional Politics.” Asian Pacific Americans and the U.S. Southwest. Thomas K. Nakayama and Carlton F. Yoshioka, eds. Tempe, AZ: Arizona State University, (1997): pp. 23 – 38.
Hirabayashi, L.R. Review of Jewel of the Desert: Japanese American Internment at Topaz, by S.C. Taylor. The Pacific Historical Review 64[1], (February 1995): pp. 152 – 154.
Nishimoto, R.S. Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, ed. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): 262 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Afterword.” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. 234 – 246.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Introduction – Demands: Nishimoto’s Study of All Center Conference.” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. 163 – 170.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Introduction – Leisure: Nishimoto’s Report on Gambling at Poston.” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. 86 – 93.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Introduction – Labor: Nishimoto’s Report on the Firebreak Gang.” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. 34 – 39.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Introduction – Autobiography: Nishimoto’s Letter to Dr. Alexander M. Leighton, November 1, 1942.” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. 3 – 8.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Introduction: Why Read Nishimoto?” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. xxv – lvi.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “A Note on Transcription and Terminology.” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. xix – xxiv.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Preface.” Inside an American Concentration Camp: Japanese American Resistance at Poston, Arizona. Selected writings by Nishimoto published posthumously. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1995): pp. xi – xv.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Migrantes de la Montaña Zapoteca y Formas de Capital.” América Indígena 55[3], (1995): pp. 23 – 34.
Hirabayashi, L. R. “Back to the Future: Re-framing Community-Based Research.” Amerasia Journal 21[1-2], (1995): pp. 103 – 118.
Hirabayashi L.R. and, Collier, M. “Embracing Diversity: A Pedagogy for Introductory Asian American Studies Courses.” Reviewing Asian America: Locating Diversity. Wendy Ng, et al., eds. Pullman: Washington State University Press, (1995): pp. 15 – 31.
Hirabayashi, L.R. Review of Living With Flowers: A History of the California Flower Market, by G. Kawaguchi. Amerasia Journal 20[2], (1994): pp.108 – 110.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Mountain Zapotec Migrants and Forms of Capital.” PoLAR, [the Journal of the American Anthropological Association unit on “Political and Legal Anthropology”] 17[2], (1994): pp. 105 – 116.
Hirabayashi, L.R. Cultural Capital: Mountain Zapotec Migrant Associations in Mexico City. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, (1993): 157 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Alquizola, M.C. “Asian American Studies: Reevaluating for the 1990’s.” The State of Asian America: Activism and Resistance in the 1990s. Karin Aguilar-San Juan, ed. Boston: South End Press, (1993): pp. 351 – 364.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Community Lost? The Significance of a Contemporary Japanese American Community in Southern California,” Asians in America: A Reader. Malcolm Collier, ed. Dubuque: Kendall-Hunt Publishing Company, (1993): pp. 169 – 183.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Hirabayashi, J.A. “Behind Barbed Wire.” The View from Within: Japanese American Art From the Internment Camps, 1942-1945, Karin M. Higa, ed. Los Angeles: Japanese American National Museum, UCLA Wright Art Gallery, and Asian American Studies UCLA, (1993): pp. 47-59.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “La Politización de la Cultura Regional: Zapotecos de la Sierra Juárez en la Ciudad de México.”America Indigena 68[3], (1989): pp. 100-115.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Hirabayashi, J. “The ‘Credible’ Witness: The Central Role of Richard S. Nishimoto in JERS.” Views From Within: The Japanese American Evacuation and Resettlement of Study. Yuji Ichioka, ed. Los Angeles: Asian American Studies Center, UCLA, (1989): pp. 65 – 94.
“A Walk Through Japantown—1935,” by anonymous author working for Paul Radin project. J.K. Yamamoto, Lane Hirabayashi, James Hirabayashi and Mary Sacharoff-Fast Wolf, eds. Hokubei Mainichi, Supplement, (Saturday, January 1, 1989): 8 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Afterward” [accompanying, “A Walk Through Japantown, 1935”]. Hokubei Mainichi, Supplement, (Saturday, January 1, 1989): p. 4.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Research and Recent Developments in Asian American Community Studies.” In Ethnic Studies, Volume 1-”Cross Cultural, Asian and Afro-American Studies.” Gary Y. Okihiro, ed. New York: Markus Wiener Publishing, Inc, (1989): pp. 237-241.
Hirabayashi, L.R. The Delectable Berry: Japanese American Contribution to the Development of the Strawberry Industry on the West Coast. Los Angeles: The Japanese American National Museum, (1989).
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Down on the Farm With The Japanese,” Review of Country Voices: The Oral History of A Japanese American Family Farm Community, by D. Masumoto. San Francisco Chronicle “Review,” (Sunday, January 1, 1988): p. 3.
Hirabayashi, L.R. Review of Exile Within: The Schooling of Japanese Americans, 1942-1945, by T. James. Amerasia Journal 14[2], (1988): pp. 146 – 148.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Tanaka, G. “The Issei Community in Moneta and the Gardena Valley, 1900-1920.” Southern California Quarterly 70[2], (1988): pp. 127 – 158.
Hirabayashi, L.R. Review of Nothing Left in My Hands: An Early Japanese American Community in California’s Pajaro Valley, by K. Nakane. Amerasia Journal 13[2], (1987): pp. 235 – 237.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Oppression in the Land Of the Free.” Review of San Francisco Chronicle “Review,” (Sunday, January 18, 1987): p.1.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “‘Moses’ Needs to be Taken with a Grain of Salt.” Review of They Call Me Moses Masaoka, by M.M. Masaoka, and B. Hosokawa. Hokubei Mainichi “Book Review,” (December 8, 1987).
Hirabayashi, L.R. “He Always Worked Within the System.” Review of San Francisco Chronicle “Review,” (Sunday, July 26, 1987): p.11.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “The Impact of Incarceration on the Education of Nisei Schoolchildren.” Japanese Americans: From Relocation to Redress. Roger Daniels, Sandra C. Taylor, and Harry H.L. Kitano, eds. Utah: University of Utah Press, (1986): pp. 44 – 51.
a. Second edition published by the University of Washington Press, (1991): pp. 44-51.
b. Reprinted in paperback edition, 1991.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “The Migrant Village Association in Latin America: A Comparative Analysis.” Latin American Research Review 21[3], (1986): pp. 7 – 29.
Chabran, M., and Hirabayashi, L.R. “The Cloak and the Shroud: On the Dual Nature of Ethnic and Family Secrets Among Third World People in the United States.” Images, Ethnic Studies Occasional Papers Series. San Francisco: School of Ethnic Studies, San Francisco State University, (1986).
Hirabayashi, L.R. “The Marriage of a Yobiyose Woman.” A Thousand Voices, No.2 (Spring, 1986): pp. 12.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Tanaka, G. The Early Gardena Valley and the Issei. Gardena, CA: The Gardena Pioneer Project, (1986): 29 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R., and Hirabayashi J.A.. "A Reconsideration of the United States Military's Role in the Violation of Japanese American Citizenship Rights." Ethnicity and War, Vol. III (Milwaukee: University of Wisconsin, 1984), pp. 87-110.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “On Being ‘Hapa’: Inside Versus Outside Views,” Hokubei Mainichi, (April 26, 1984): p. 1.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “Understanding the ‘Happa’ Experience,” The New York Nichibei, (March 9, 1984).
Hirabayashi, L.R. “On the Formation of Migrant Village Associations in Mexico: Mixtec and Mountain Zapotec In Mexico City.” Urban Anthropology 12[1], (1983): pp. 29 – 44.
Hirabayashi, L.R. Asian American Community Studies: Selected References. Chicago, III: Council of Planning Librarians, Bibliography No. 94, (1982): 31 pp.
Hirabayashi, L.R. “The Best of Both Worlds? Reflections on the Bi-Cultural Experience.” Echoes from Gold Mountain: An Asian American Journal 3, (1982): pp. 76-78.
a. Also published in Asian Journal [Barnard College and Columbia University], (Spring, 1980).