Abstract
In Suburban Refugees: Class and Resistance in Little Saigon, Jennifer Huynh challenges the common view that refugee resettlement follows a straightforward path toward assimilation, stability, and upward mobility. Focusing on Vietnamese refugees in Little Saigon, Orange County, California, Huynh examines how refugees navigate displacement, housing insecurity, and political exclusion in suburban spaces often idealized as homogenous and prosperous. Drawing on extensive data, the book presents suburban resettlement as a prolonged process shaped by structural forces and community resistance. Huynh situates her analysis within growing suburban inequality and enduring racialized policies that limit refugee opportunities long after formal resettlement. Her framing of suburbs as active political terrains emphasizes refugees’ struggles for place, home, and belonging.
Recommended Citation
Pham, Phoebe T.
(2026)
"Book Review of Suburban refugees: Class and resistance in Little Saigon,"
Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement: Vol. 21
:
Iss.
1,
Article 2.
DOI: 10.7771/2153-8999.1458
Available at:
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/jsaaea/vol21/iss1/2