See website: Japanese-American internment camps.
Internment Camps were used to confine and isolate people form the outside world.
They really were much different Relocation Camps and Internment camps were the same thing just that relocation camps were the real camps and internment camps were where the Japanese Americans had to go before they made the relocation camps.
there are 39 diffrent Japanese internment camps
Japanese children in the internment camps often felt confused, scared, and isolated. They were separated from their homes, schools, and friends, which caused feelings of disorientation and trauma. Many experienced a sense of injustice and discrimination.
See website: Japanese-American internment camps.
Yes, children were killed in internment camps.
Yes, all internment camps are forced incarceration.
No, the Japanese- Americans were not happy about the internment camps in WW2.
The end of the war made internment camps no longer neccssary or logical
No. The Japanese Internment camps were not hurtful, they simply isolated the Japanese from the rest of the country.
Some punishments in the Japanese internment camps included confinement in isolation cells, loss of privileges such as visitation rights and access to amenities, physical abuse by guards, and forced labor assignments. Additionally, families could be separated as a form of punishment.
The Internment camps for Japanese-Americans were structures and the Holocaust is a concept. There were camps within the Holocaust designed and used to imprison certain sections of society, much like the internment camps in the USA. But what went on in these camps was very different.