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Session Submission Type: Invited Session (90 minute)
This session examines new forms of exclusion shaping Asian and Asian American lives in the United States today. Focusing on recent policies governing the H-1B and J-1 visas, participants will explore how shifting immigration rules and growing precarity in temporary visa programs have reshaped pathways of mobility and belonging. The session also considers the resurgence of anti-non-Christian sentiment and its entanglement with racialized exclusion. Together, these discussions highlight how contemporary immigration and cultural politics reproduce hierarchies of citizenship and underscore the persistent racialization of Asian Americans in the U.S.
Rianka Roy, Wake Forest University
Yingyi Ma, Syracuse University
Weirong Guo, University of California-Riverside
Jennifer Huynh, University of Notre Dame
Ken Chih-Yan Sun, Villanova University