Concentration Camps
- Hausler, D. E. (1964). History of the Japanese-American relocation center at Hunt, Minidoka County, Idaho.
- Kleinkopf, A., & Minidoka Internment National Monument (Agency : U.S.). (2003). Relocation center diary. Hagerman, ID: Minidoka Internment National Monument.
- Light, J. T. (1947). The development of a junior-senior high school program in a relocation center for people of Japanese ancestry during the war with Japan.
- Nomura, K. (1991). Kenjiro Nomura: An artist's view of the Japanese American internment. Seattle, Wash.?: s.n..
- Roberts-Wright, B. M. S. (1994). Hunt for Idaho: Evacuees 1942-1945 and hometeaders 1947-1949 T.P. Minidoka Prisoner of War Camp 1942-1945. s.l: s.n..
- Sakoda, J. M. (1949). Minidoka: An analysis of changing patterns of social interaction.
- Tamura, T. (2013). Minidoka: An American concentration camp.
- Tremayne, R. M., Shallat, T. A., Lavitt, M., Boise State University., & College of Southern Idaho. (2013). Surviving Minidoka: The legacy of WWII Japanese American incarceration. Boise, Idaho: Boise State University Publications Office, College of Social Sciences and Public Affairs.
- Wegars, P. (2002). Golden State meets Gem State: Californians at Idaho's Kooskia Internment Camp. Moscow, Idaho: Kooskia Internment Camp Project.
- Wegars, P., & Ayukawa, M. M. (2010). Imprisoned in Paradise: Japanese internee road workers at the World War II Kooskia Internment Camp. Moscow, Idaho: Asian American Comparative Collection, Univ. of Idaho.
- Wegars, P., & Hendricks, D. (2013). As rugged as the terrain: CCC "boys," federal convicts, and World War II alien internees wrestle with a mountain wilderness. Caldwell, Idaho: Caxton Press.
- Wegars, P., & University of Idaho. (1998). "A real he-man's job": Japanese internees at the Kooskia Internment Camp, Idaho, 1943-1945. Moscow, Idaho: Asian American Comparative Collection, University of Idaho.
- Wegars, P., Ayukawa, M. M., & University of Idaho. (2010). Imprisoned in Paradise: Japanese internee road workers at the World War II Kooskia Internment Camp. Moscow, Idaho: Asian American Comparative Collection, University of Idaho.
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