Asian Americans and the Presidential Election
Monday, October 7, 2024 · 11AM–3PM ET
Theron Room, Theodore Sedgwick Wright Library
About this Event
Join us on October 7th, 2024, for a free hybrid event titled “Asian Americans and the Presidential Election,” hosted by the Center for Asian American Christianity at Princeton Theological Seminary. This conference will feature thought-provoking plenary talks and a dynamic panel discussion with scholars Khyati Joshi, Brad Onishi, and Jerry Park, alongside community faith leader Hyepin Im. Together, they will explore the intersection of faith, politics, and civic engagement within Asian American communities. As we approach the 2025 Presidential Election, this event aims to foster open dialogue, raise political consciousness, and promote democratic participation among diverse Asian American groups.
Why Attend?
This event aims to foster an open dialogue that addresses the often-avoided political conversations within Asian American families, churches, and communities. It provides a platform to raise political consciousness, promote democratic participation, and explore the role of faith in shaping civic engagement.
Whether you are a faith leader, scholar, community organizer, or layperson, this conference will offer valuable insights and practical tools for navigating the complex political landscape of the 2025 Presidential Election. Participants will leave with a deeper understanding of how Asian American communities contribute to and are shaped by U.S. democracy.
This hybrid event, accessible both in person at Princeton Theological Seminary and online, provides a unique opportunity for participants to engage in meaningful conversations about the complex political dynamics within Asian American communities. It offers a “permission structure” to discuss political differences openly and constructively, creating an inclusive space for intergenerational and interethnic dialogue. Whether you are a faith leader, scholar, community organizer, or layperson interested in the intersection of religion, politics, and social justice, this event will equip you with new insights and tools to navigate and contribute to the U.S. democratic process. Don’t miss this chance to be part of a transformative discussion that challenges traditional political binaries and highlights the diverse voices within Asian American Christianity.
Event Schedule View Lectures on YouTube
View Event Sessions
Event Highlights:
Plenary Talks and Panel Discussions: This event will explore the political dynamics within Asian American communities, focusing on challenges related to political binaries, racial identities, and religious affiliations.
Diverse Perspectives: Engage with cutting-edge research and thought-provoking insights that challenge traditional political binaries.
Interactive Sessions: Participate in dynamic Q&A sessions and a panel discussion on how faith shapes civic identity and action for Asian American Christians in today’s polarized political climate.
Speakers & Panelists
Khyati Y. Joshi, Co-Founder of the Institute for Teaching Diversity and Social Justice (IDSJ)
Khyati Y. Joshi is a scholar and thought leader on the intersecting issues of race, religion and immigration in the United States. Dr. Joshi is co-founder of the Institute for Teaching Diversity and Social Justice (IDSJ), which offers multi-day institutes, customized workshops, and one-on-one and small-group coaching for organizations and professionals seeking to build their equity and justice competencies. She is a full Professor in the School of Education at Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Professor Joshi engages educators, policy-makers, and community leaders in an examination of the historical and systemic nature of bias, its consequences in everyday life, and the solutions that foster social justice and inclusiveness. In doing so, she provides clients with the tools to enhance both their own and their organizations’ ability to provide inclusive, meaningful services and experiences in an increasingly connected and diverse world.
Dr. Joshi is the author and editor of multiple books, including White Christian Privilege: The Illusion of Religious Equality in America (NYU Press, 2020) and Envisioning Religion, Race, and Asian Americans (University of Hawaii Press, 2020) , co-edited with David Yoo and has contributed to numerous ground-breaking texts and journals in her field. Her writing and research illuminate structures and policies that are often invisible, to inform race relations and interfaith work in the United States.
Brad Onishi, Social Commentator, Scholar, and Co-Host of the Straight White American Jesus (SWAJ) Podcast
Brad Onishi, Social Commentator, Scholar, and Co-Host of the Straight White American Jesus (SWAJ) Podcast
Brad Onishi is a social commentator, scholar, and co-host of the Straight White American Jesus (SWAJ) podcast. He is an adjunct professor at San Francisco State University. He founded Axis Mundi Media in 2023 in order to provide a platform for research-based podcasts focused on safeguarding democracy from the threats of extremism and authoritarianism. His writing has appeared at the New York Times, Politico, Rolling Stone, NBC News, HuffPost, and many other outlets. Onishi is a frequent guest on national radio, podcast, and television outlets, including “Fresh Air” with Terry Gross and MSNBC. His podcast, SWAJ, ranks in the top 50 of Politics shows on Apple’s podcast charts – ahead of programs from NPR, the NYT, and other national outlets. His book, Preparing for War: The Extremist History of White Christian Nationalism – And What Comes Next is available now.
Jerry Park, Associate Professor of Sociology at Baylor University
Jerry Park, Associate Professor of Sociology at Baylor University
Jerry Park is an associate professor of sociology at Baylor University. He received his Bachelor’s degree in Psychology with a minor in Sociology from the University of Virginia and pursued a Master’s and PhD in Sociology with a focus on religion and race/ethnic relations at the University of Notre Dame. He served as a research assistant on the Panel Survey of American Religion and Ethnicity (now called the Portraits of American Lives [PALS]) and subsequently joined Baylor University’s sociology department as an assistant professor in 2004. One of Jerry’s areas of interest remains the sociology of religion, but his focus has shifted more towards the sociology of race relations with a particular emphasis on Asian Americans. His research includes topics such as racial/ethnic and religious inequality, identity, culture, intergroup relations, prejudice, and discrimination. For a link to his CV, click here. Over the past few years, Jerry has started blogging on a group site, “Black White and Gray,” and is also an occasional blogger for “Asian-Nation.”
Hyepin Im, President and Founder of Faith and Community Empowerment (FACE)
Hyepin Im, President and Founder of Faith and Community Empowerment (FACE)
Hyepin Im is the President and Founder of Faith and Community Empowerment (FACE), a national nonprofit involved in empowering churches and nonprofits to leverage their resources by building capacity, leadership, and partnerships in economic development and serving as a bridge between the Korean/Asian American community and the greater community at large. Since its inception in 2001, FACE has had over 1,000 partners, ranging from the White House to Fortune 500 companies. Successful initiatives include educating over 10,000 homebuyers and helping them receive over $1.4 million in down payment assistance, saving over $83 million in assets from foreclosure, partnering with both FDIC and Freddie Mac in developing a Korean curriculum in financial literacy and homeownership, implementing a historic $5 million U.S. Department of Labor workforce development program, and hosting joint conferences with the White House and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to mobilize 4,000 Korean American churches for economic development.
View the Event Replays
In-person location: Theron Room, Theodore Sedgwick Wright Library at Princeton Theological Seminary (25 Library Pl, Princeton, NJ 08540)*
Virtual location: Airmeet
*Speakers for this event will be joining virtually via Airmeet.
Conference Schedule (Eastern Time)
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Monday, Oct 7, 2024
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11:00 AM
Opening Remarks
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11:10 AM
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11:40 AM
Q&A with Jerry Park
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12:00 PM
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12:30 PM
Q&A with Khyati Joshi
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12:50 PM
Break
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1:10 PM
Panel Discussion — Hyepin Im, Khyati Joshi, Jerry Park
Plenary Sessions
With the 2024 election just ahead, record numbers of Asian Americans are registering to participate in this very close election. What insights can we glean, especially with regard to the role of religion, from Asian Americans political participation in 2020? We will examine voting preferences, white Christian nationalism attitudes and other social issues that do not receive much attention in the American mainstream media.
Christian nationalism and Project 2025 are in the news, but how do they affect Asian Americans? In this presentation, Dr. Onishi will outline how these phenomena envision the American family and how Asian Americans fit into this vision.
The contrast between Trump’s divisive approach and Harris’s inclusive, multicultural message highlights the ongoing tension between those who seek to maintain the status quo and those who advocate for progressive, equitable change. While Asian American religious communities have long been overlooked, the Asian American community is the fastest growing voter group in America. This presentation will discuss factors influencing the vote in Asian American religious communities.
Host
David C. Chao, Director of the Center for Asian American Christianity
David C. Chao, Director of the Center for Asian American Christianity
Dr. David C. Chao is the director of the Center for Asian American Christianity at Princeton Theological Seminary. He teaches courses on Asian American theology and organizes academic programming in Asian American theology and ministry. His research and writing focus on Asian American theology, the uses of Christian doctrine for liberation, the convergence and divergence of Protestant and Catholic dogmatics, and the theology of Karl Barth.
His first book, titled Concursus and Concept Use in Karl Barth’s Doctrine of Providence, is under contract with Routledge. He is grant co-author and project editor for the $300,000 translation grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities to the Karl Barth Translator’s Seminar. He is co-leader of a $250,000 Henry Luce grant project titled “Religiously-Inspired Asian American Coalitional Justice Work.” He is principal investigator of a Louisville Institute-funded project titled “Stories of Faith, Resilience, and Politics: First-Generation East Asian American Christians.”
Chao is a graduate of Yale University (BA), Regent College (MDiv), and Princeton Theological Seminary (ThM, PhD). He is a member of the American Academy of Religion and the Association for Asian American Studies. Chao has a wide range of pastoral experience with Chinese American, Korean American, and Pan-Asian churches and ministries and is an active member of the Presbyterian Church (USA).
Read his article “Evangelical or Mainline? Doctrinal Similarity and Difference in Asian American Christianity: Sketching a Social-Practical Theory of Christian Doctrine” here. You can also check out “The 1517 Project and World Christianity: Migration and the Uses of Doctrine” here or download the free PDF version here. This paper was presented at the 2023 Asian American Theology Conference “Multiple Belongings in Transpacific Christianities: Christian Faith and Asian Migration to the US.”