The following points are set in an order that I feel would best answer my project question about whether dual citizens at Emory "feel at home". They look a broad perspectives and backgrounds about immigrants and diversity in America and then zoom-in to specific opinions of Emory's dual and tri citizens:
1. America's brief creation history and its immigration. 2. American diversity propaganda. 3. Cultural sectors in communities. eg. New York City (New York) and New Canaan (Connecticut). 4. Suppression groups. eg. KKK, Japanese internment, Native American massacre. 5. Emory student interviewees write-up (unique opinions), summary (overlaping opinions). 6. American expectation (propaganda) vs. what interviewees see it to be. This page will answer the research question. This structure may change depending on what information I am able to attain.
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Stakeholders are the people who are usually pulled into an issue when they are directly involved in it - when they hold a stake in it. This could mean that either the content is about them, or the content may simply interest them. As my autoethnography is directed at dual citizens, they are obviously going to be stakeholders. American citizens without passports from outside the U.S. can also be considered stakeholders since they may be interested in reading about what dual citizens think about their country from a foreign perspective.
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December 2016
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