Gordon Morris Bakken is Professor of History at California State University, Fullerton, Past President of Phi Alpha Theta, the national honor society in history, Founding Vice President and a Director of the California Supreme Court Historical Society, former Parliamentarian of the Organization of American Historians, Series Editor of The Legal History of North America for the University of Oklahoma Press, Editor of Law in the Western United States (2000) for the University of Oklahoma Press, and a member of the editorial boards of Western Legal History and Montana: The Magazine of Western History. He is editor of California Legal History, the journal of the California Supreme Court Historical Society. Professor Bakken earned his B.S. (1966), M.S. (1967), Ph.D.(1970), and J.D.(1973) at the University of Wisconsin. He is the author/editor of sixteen books, forty-one articles, sixteen book chapters and encyclopedia entries, and numerous reviews. He is co-author with Brenda Farrington of Learning California History (1999), Harlan Davidson, Inc. and the six-volume work, The American West (2000), Garland Publishing, Inc. He has held twelve research grants including the Russell Sage Residency Fellowship in Law, two American Bar Foundation Fellowships, and the Bradley Fellowship at the Montana Historical Society. Professor Bakken has been the Theta Pi Chapter, Phi Alpha Theta faculty advisor on the CSU, Fullerton campus since 1982. Professor Bakken teaches Westward Movement, Women of the American West, Women and American Law, American Legal and Constitutional History, The Development of American Law, American Military Heritage, Historical Thinking, Historical Writing, Historical Editing, California History, Real Estate and Land Use Law, Principles of Real Estate, Environmental Law, Administrative Law, and Collective Bargaining as well as survey courses in American History. Alexandra Kindell, doctoral candidate at Iowa State University and adjunct professor at California State University, Fullerton. Her research and teaching interests are agricultural and Rural History, Women's History, and Twentieth-Century U.S. Social History.
The powerful two-volume Encyclopedia of Immigration and
Migration in the American West is a winner: it will appeal both to
high school and college library holdings in offering a definitive
reference cataloging both key immigrants and key migration patterns
of different ethnic groups in the American West. From entries on
Chinese early immigrants to Japanese internment, discussions are
sometimes several pages in length and conclude with bibliographic
material for further reading. Contributors work for historical
societies, museums, and universities and provide both authority and
clarity.
*CALIFORNIA BOOKWATCH*
"The scholarly coverage is as diverse as the region itself,
stretching beyond the various ethnic groups crossing borders or
landing at ports, and also encompassing the movements of Native
American and African Americans, as well as the key role of women in
the region′s development. Included are biographies, community
histories, demographic studies, and even entries on immigration
law."
*for future reference*
"In summary, this is one of the better works in a long line of
scholarly compendiums of research and reviews on the relationship
among families, health, and health care. The book moves the field
along for investigators and policymakers and is a reasonable
interest to clinicians."
*Book Review*
"An eclectic, people-centered set of signed essays loosely tied
together by the themes of immigration into and migration within the
American West is presented here by Bakken and Kindel, following
hard on the heels of Bakken′s Encyclopedia of Women in the
American West. Recommended for public and academic libraries
with interest in the social history of the United States."
*Nathan E. Bender*
"This set includes numerous articles on Native American tribes,
many biographical entries, and a variety of articles on cities and
towns, ethnic and racial groups, and laws and policies. The
extensive bibliography that appears at the end of each volume will
be a valuable resource for students."
*Ginny Gustin*
"The writing is engaging, sometimes stirring. Commentary on
demographics and social interaction illuminates the roles of simple
folk in the exploration and settlement of the Great Plains and the
gradual decimation and displacement of First Nations. It is a
worthy addition to academic and large public libraries."
*Mary Ellen Snodgrass*
"Particular strengths reside in separate entries on Indian tribes
and on the internal migrations of African Americans and women.
The encyclopedia devotes less coverage to its urban sketches, which
are presumably meant to be representative rather then
comprehensive, and to its articles on European and Asian groups. As
the West is currently the fastest growing part of the US and
arguably where the future of America lies, this is a noteworthy
contribution to regional research that will be indispensable
for area studies collections. Highly recommended."
*F. J. Augustyn Jr.*
"SAGE Reference recently published a title that is timely while
offering valuable historical perspective. The articles in this
encyclopedia tell a fascinating story of opportunity, enterprise
and community building coupled with forced migration, natural
disasters and exploitation. This encyclopedia is a worthy
addition to both academic and larger public library collections
where there is need."
*Tom Gilson*
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