Beyond the Model Minority Myth
The Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center leader discusses mitigating the challenging realities facing Asian immigrants today.
October 24, 2025 | Read Time: 1 minute
How does the “model minority myth” impact how funders view and support Asian immigrant communities? What role do disaggregated data play in ensuring their thriving?
In a conversation with Ben Hires, CEO of the Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center, hosts Phil Buchanan and Grace Nicolette dig into the vast array of services that BCNC — and nonprofits like it — provide and the crucial role they play in mitigating the challenging realities facing Asian immigrants today, from ICE enforcement creating a climate of fear to long-standing funding gaps that leave essential services underfunded.
Hires explains why translation services as well as robust and disaggregated datasets are foundational to ensuring immigrant communities are well served, and why supporting both direct services and systemic change isn’t an either-or proposition, but “a both-and.”
Despite mounting challenges, Hires’s message is unshakeably optimistic: “The immigrant community, in particular, we know is resilient and strong and is not going away.”
We appreciate the opportunity to share this podcast and want to note that the interview was conducted by Buchanan and Nicolette with no involvement from the Chronicle’s newsroom.
