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The volume represents an attempt of a complex study of the politogenetic processes in their regional and temporary variety. The authors hope that their survey can and should also promote a better understanding of the general tendencies... more
In this essay, I provide a brief overview of the Hawaiian independence movement and discuss resurgences of independence discourse among activists, artists and other grassroots Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian people). My focus is on... more
The creation of a hegemonic, master narrative for Hawaiʻi—sourced almost solely from English-language materials—has long offered a highly exclusive characterization of past events and figures in Hawaiian history. Elements within this... more
ʻAuwai are the irrigation ditches Kānaka Maoli developed to allow for sustainable, prolific wetland taro cultivation. This article traces the decline of ‘auwai and lo‘i kalo alongside the loss of Kanaka Maoli control of our national... more
In this essay, I explore ways Native Pacific activists enact Indigenous futurities and open space to transform present settler colonial conditions. In particular, I highlight the Protect Mauna a Wākea movement as a field of such openings.... more
July 31, 1999 | Cultural Survival Quarterly | Issue 23.2 Every day, wide-body jets bring new tourists and new residents to the Hawaiian islands. In 1997 the state had 1.2 million residents; Hawaiians and part Hawaiians made up 13 to 18... more
Here in Hawaii, the only ones in the rat race are mongooses, along with Federal and State officials wanting to kill both rats and mongooses. However, there is a big flaw in the recent Federal and State proposal for statewide eradication... more
DOCUMENTATION OF HAWAI`I SIGN LANGUAGE: AN OVERVIEW OF SOME RECENT MAJOR RESEARCH FINDINGS Brenda Clark, Linda Lambrecht, Samantha Rarrick, Claire Stabile, and James Woodward This paper summarizes some of the recent major research... more
An annual gathering/workshop of sixty-five ordained and lay clergy, along with church administrators, from the UCC Churches of Maui, Moloka'i, and Lānaʻi where Dr. Ronald Williams Jr. was the guest speaker, offering three illustrated... more
This paper reveals the deep illegitimacy of the ruling government in Hawaiʻi 1894-1898 by focusing on voting rights and laws created in a 1894 Constitutional Convention and the use of these laws by the ruling oligarchy to hold tightly to... more
This work integrates information about the architectural ruins, ethnohistory, and paleo-environmental evidence related to the `Alekoko Fishpond in Kaua`i, Hawaiian Islands. The fishpond most likely was built close to AD 1400, related to... more
Breve introduzione alla figura della divinità Hawaiana PELE, dea del fuoco e dei vulcani, raro esempio di divinità femminile associata al fuoco.
Prima pubblicazione: agosto 2010
Megumi Chibana translated into Japanese the "Teaching for Maunakea: Kiʻai Perspectives” forum from Amerasia Journal. The translated article published in a magazine entitled Ekkyo Hiroba. This magazine has targeted readers and customers in... more
Through the lenses of Marxist and globalist analysis I argue that the capitalist system is commodifying the Hawaiian concept of Aloha.
Volume in the BAAS American Studies Paperbacks series published by Edinburgh University Press, 20 February 2017 (and distributed by OUP in the USA from 1 March 2017). Reviews: "A concise and lucid survey of US foreign policy. Adam... more
In this first extensive study of contemporary Hawaiian literature, Brandy Nalāni McDougall examines a vibrant selection of fiction, poetry, and drama by emerging and established Hawaiian authors, including Haunani-Kay Trask, John Dominis... more
Résumé en français "Surf: Une histoire de la glisse. De La première vague aux Beach Boys" analyse la riche histoire du surf à Hawaï au XIXe siècle, et montre comment le he'e nalu est devenu le surf moderne au début du XXe siècle. Les... more
In lieu of an abstract: Every nation has a view of itself that is maintained by a common narrative and habits of identification. This contributes to a sense of belonging and is expressed through accounts of ‘national’ identity.... more
This essay analyzes the interconnected regimes of US settler colonialism and militarization in Hawai‘i by examining the expansion of public health programs under martial law during World War II. I explore the biopolitics of wartime public... more
An Interview with Jamaica Osorio
Emma Scanlan
Wasafiri Vol. 31 , Iss. 3,2016
Question écrite n° 01450 de M. Richard Tuheiava (Polynésie française - SOC) publiée dans le JO Sénat du 09/08/2012 - page 1786 M. Richard Tuheiava interroge M. le ministre des affaires étrangères sur la validité actuelle du traité... more
Ancient Hawaiian geneology chart from Manōkalanipō to Kaumualiʻi.
CANDO “Native Hawaiian Impacts” Ch. 8.0, pp. 8.01-8.151 Energy Research Group, Inc. Hawaii Externalities Workbook ©1997. Hawaiian Electric Company. Honolulu. Cultural Advocacy Network for Developing Options (CANDO), by Jon Matsuoka,... more
An undergraduate research paper which analyzes the "Naha Stone" myth and how it is attributed to King Kamehameha I's success conquering all of the main Hawaiian Islands.
Fast ferry catamarans have been in use for several decades. They possess the advantage of overcoming one of the major deficiencies of water transportation: low speed. Although their operation has spread throughout different parts of the... more
The cruise industry worldwide has increased rapidly since the beginning of the millennium. Hawaii is no exception to this. Since the 1970s, cruise ships periodically visited the Hawaiian Islands, yet overnight cruising among the islands... more
Ola Nā Iwi is a grant project that produced and distributed a place-based curriculum resource packet that provides K-12 teachers with both primary and secondary sources—texts, images, videos, links and more—centered on the royal, and... more
A "meditation" on the intersections between culture and science, using Mauna Kea as an example.
book review by Ronald Williams Jr. PhD, Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge, UH Mānoa
Since the 1970s Ed Greevy has documented the struggle for Native Hawaiian rights
This essay identifies the intersections of blackness and Indigeneity in the writings of Prince Alexander Liholiho, Samuel Kamakau, King Kalākaua, and Queen Lili‘uokalani as sites of potential for a particular thread of nineteenth-century... more