Scholarship and Biography

Yuri W. Doolan (PhD, Northwestern University 2019) is Associate Professor of History and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and the inaugural chair of Asian American and Pacific Islander Studies at Brandeis University. He is an award-winning historian whose work explores the anti-Asian racism and structural violence of US militarism and empire.

His book The First Amerasians: Mixed Race Koreans from Camptowns to America (New York: Oxford University Press, 2024) tells the powerful, oftentimes heartbreaking, story of how Americans created and used the concept of the "Amerasian" to remove thousands of mixed race children from their Korean mothers in US-occupied South Korea to adoptive American homes during the 1950s and 1960s. The First Amerasians explores the Cold War ideologies undergirding this so-called rescue and shows how this process of child removal and placement via US refugee, adoption, and immigration laws profoundly shaped the lives of mixed race Koreans and their mothers. Yuri is currently underway on a second major book project that investigates the relationship between US military prostitution in Cold War Asia and the Pacific and anti-Asian racism and violence in US society and culture.

Yuri is also the author of a number of peer-reviewed essays and public facing works exploring the lasting legacies and human consequences of the Korean War. His research on military brides, transnational and transracial adoption, mixed race Asians, the US camptown military sex industry, and “comfort women” appears in Critical Ethnic Studies, The Journal of Asian American Studies, Diplomatic History, Together at Last: Stories of Adoption and Reunion in the Age of DNA, Mixed Korean: Our Stories (인종주의의덫을 넘어서: 혼혈 한국인, 혼혈 입양인 이야), The Journal of American Ethnic History, Koreatowns: Exploring the Economics, Politics, and Identities of Korean Spatial Formation, 경계를 넘는 한인들: 이주, 젠더, 세대와 귀속의 정치, and a permanent installation in Berlin called Die „Trostfrauen“ und der gemeinsame Kampf gegen sexualisierte Gewalt. Yuri’s research and writing has been supported by the Social Science Research Council, the Korea Foundation, the Academy of Korean Studies, the Fulbright Program, the Mandel Center for the Humanities, the Northeast Asia Council, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Mellon Foundation, the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress, as well as his home institutions.

Honors

Kluge Fellowship
Library of Congress (United States, Washington), 2025
Honorable Mention, First Book Award
Immigration and Ethnic History Society (United States, Ithaca) - IEHS, 2025
Mellon Emerging Faculty Leaders Award
Institute for Citizens & Scholars (United States, Princeton), 2024
ACLS Fellowship
American Council of Learned Societies (United States, New York) - ACLS, 2023
Research Grant
Fulbright Association (United States, Washington D.C.), 2016; 2021-2022
Northeast Asia Council (NEAC) Korean Studies Grant
Association for Asian Studies (United States, Ann Arbor) - AAS, 2020
The Carlton C. Qualey Memorial Article Award
Immigration and Ethnic History Society (United States, Ithaca) - IEHS, 2020
Mandel Faculty Grant in the Humanities
Brandeis University (United States, Waltham), 2020
The Korea Foundation, Postdoctoral Fellowship (declined)
Harvard University (United States, Cambridge), 2019
Korean Studies Dissertation Workshop
Social Science Research Council (United States, New York) - SSRC, 2016
Graduate Studies Fellowship
Korea Foundation (South Korea, Seoul) - KF, 2016
Fellowship for Korean Language Training
Korea Foundation (South Korea, Seoul) - KF, 2015
Research Prize
Academy of Korean Studies (South Korea, Seongnam-si) - AKS, 2015
Critical Language Scholarship Program, South Korea
United States Department of State (United States, Washington D.C.) - DOS, 2012

Organizational Affiliations

Associate Professor of History and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Department of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Brandeis University

Associate Professor of History and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Department of History, Brandeis University

Education

Northwestern University
Ph.D.
Northwestern University
M.A.
The Ohio State University-Main Campus
B.A.