Nagata D K, Trierweiler S J, Talbot R
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
Am J Orthopsychiatry. 1999 Jan;69(1):19-29. doi: 10.1037/h0080378.
A national survey investigated the long-term effects of World War II internment on family communication, ethnic preference, confidence in personal rights, and attitudes to redress among third-generation Japanese Americans (sansei) who were infants or young children during incarceration. Findings were compared to those for noninterned sansei with and without parents who had been interned. Differences between interned and noninterned sansei were found primarily in family communication and family distance.
一项全国性调查研究了二战期间拘留对第三代日裔美国人(三世)的家庭沟通、种族偏好、个人权利信心以及赔偿态度的长期影响,这些三世在被拘留期间还是婴儿或幼儿。研究结果与有或没有被拘留父母的未被拘留三世进行了比较。被拘留和未被拘留三世之间的差异主要体现在家庭沟通和家庭距离方面。