AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
James Podgers Troubled Paradise 92-AUG ABA Journal 65 (August, 2006) Hardly a shot was fired in the 1893 overthrow of Queen Lili'uokalani that triggered Hawaii's transition from a sovereign nation to a U.S. territory and eventually the 50th state. But since then, various coalitions in Hawaii's melting-pot population have skirmished over the question of whether Native Hawaiians should be granted some measure of... 2006
Sharona Hoffman "RACIALLY-TAILORED" MEDICINE UNRAVELED 55 American University Law Review 395 (December, 2005) Introduction. 396 I. Race-Based Research and Therapeutic Practices. 400 A. The Story of BiDil. 400 B. Race-Based Research. 403 C. A Growing Interest in Race-Based Medicine: Why Now?. 406 II. Does Race Mean Anything?. 410 A. Race in the Medical and Social Sciences. 410 B. Race and the Law. 416 C. Shifting the Focus Away from Race . 418... 2005
William Bradford BEYOND REPARATIONS: AN AMERICAN INDIAN THEORY OF JUSTICE 66 Ohio State Law Journal 1 (2005) It is perhaps impossible to overstate the magnitude of the human injustice perpetrated against American Indian people: indeed, the severity and duration of the harms endured by the original inhabitants of the U.S. may well rival those suffered by any other group past or present, domestic or international. While financial reparations for certain... 2005
  CIVIL RIGHTS -- SECTION 1981 -- NINTH CIRCUIT HOLDS THAT PRIVATE SCHOOL'S REMEDIAL ADMISSIONS POLICY VIOLATES § 1981. -- DOE V. KAMEHAMEHA SCHOOLS, 416 F.3D 1025 (9TH CIR. 2005). 119 Harvard Law Review 661 (December, 2005) For a century, 42 U.S.C. § 1981 lay dormant, a forgotten remnant of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 that guaranteed to [a]ll persons the same right in every State and Territory to make and enforce contracts . . . as is enjoyed by white citizens. Then, in the 1970s, the Supreme Court resurrected § 1981, holding that it reached purely private... 2005
Rebecca Tsosie Engaging the Spirit of Racial Healing Within Critical Race Theory: an Exercise in Transformative Thought 11 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 21 (Fall 2005) INTRODUCTION. 21 I. Understanding CRT as a Vehicle for Transformative Thought. 22 II. The Relationship of Justice to the Law. 27 III. The Native Hawaiian Case. 29 A. Historical Background. 30 B. Contemporary Politics. 33 IV. Racial Healing and the Role of Transformational Thought. 39 CONCLUSION. 47 2005
Valerie Alter Hawaiian Monk Seals: from Controversy to Cooperation, a Case Study of Cooperative Federalism 20 Journal of Environmental Law & Litigation 157 (2005) The Endangered Species Act (ESA) permits the federal government to regulate the states' treatment of endangered species, often inviting resentment and consternation from state officials. States resent that the federal government comes to their territory and tells them how to treat their animals and manage their land. Despite the potential for... 2005
Randall Peerenboom HUMAN RIGHTS AND RULE OF LAW: WHAT'S THE RELATIONSHIP? 36 Georgetown Journal of International Law 809 (Spring, 2005) C1-3Table of Contents I. Bolstering the Shaky Foundations of the Human Rights Movement: Conceptual Issues. 815 A. Rule of Law to the Rescue? The Contested Nature of Rule of Law. 826 B. The Inability of Rule of Law to Provide Effective Guidance on Specific Issues. 834 II. The Implementation of Human Rights and the Practical Limitations of Rule of... 2005
Jon M. Van Dyke Population, Voting, and Citizenship in the Kingdom of Hawai'i 28 University of Hawaii Law Review 81 (Winter, 2005) This article was written as a chapter in Who Owns the Crown Lands of Hawai'i?, which is being published by the University of Hawai'i Press. This article addresses a set of issues that have become important (and controversial) in the debates regarding the claims of the Native Hawaiian People related to the illegal overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai'i... 2005
Stuart Banner Preparing to Be Colonized: Land Tenure and Legal Strategy in Nineteenth-century Hawaii 39 Law and Society Review 273 (June, 2005) In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, throughout the Pacific Rim, European and American colonizers reorganized indigenous systems of property rights in land to make them look more like European property systems, with disastrous effects for the indigenous people involved. The very first of these schemes, however, was the Mähele of... 2005
Kahikino Noa Dettweiler Racial Classification or Cultural Identification?: the Gathering Rights Jurisprudence of Two Twentieth Century Hawaiian Supreme Court Justices 6 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal J. 5 (Winter, 2005) I. Introduction II. Foundations of Hawaiian Gathering A. Hawaiian Prehistory B. Post Contact Changes in Land Tenure III. The Kuleana Act and Oni A. Implementation of the Kuleana Act Through Oni B. The Effects of Oni C. John Papa Ii and the Shift in Hawaii's Power Structure IV. The Richardson Years A. William Shaw Richardson B. Palama: Setting the... 2005
  Recent Publications 26 Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law 633 (2005) Paradise Laborers: Hotel Workers in the Global Economy. Patricia A. Adler and Peter Adler. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2004. 296 pages. Paperback: $21.95. In Paradise Laborers, Patricia and Peter Adler present conclusions drawn from eight years of ethnographic research of the employees toiling in five luxury resorts in the Hawaiian... 2005
R. Hōkūlei Lindsey Responsibility with Accountability: the Birth of a Strategy to Protect Kanaka Maoli Traditional Knowledge 48 Howard Law Journal 763 (Winter 2005) Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) cosmology is clear about the genealogical order of the cosmos. The Kumulipo, a genealogical chant of creation, chronicles the genealogical order of the world and reveals that all things are related by birth. As such, the foundational teaching of this Kanaka Maoli cosmology is that the Akua (gods), ina (land), and... 2005
Robert L. Tsai SACRED VISIONS OF LAW 90 Iowa Law Review 1095 (March, 2005) Around the time of the Bicentennial Celebration of the U.S. Constitution's framing, Sanford Levinson called upon Americans to renew our constitutional faith. This Article answers the call by explicating the ways in which two landmark constitutional law decisions --Marbury v. Madison and Brown v. Board of Education--have been used by... 2005
Danielle Conway-Jones Safeguarding Hawaiian Traditional Knowledge and Cultural Heritage: Supporting the Right to Self-determination and Preventing the Co-modification of Culture 48 Howard Law Journal 737 (Winter 2005) I. Our own people say, Hawaiian at heart. Makes me sick to hear how easily genealogy flows away. Two thousand years of wise creation bestowed for a smile on resident non natives. Form of survival, this thoughtless inclusion. Taking inforeigners and friends. Dismissing history with a servant's grin. II. Hawaiian at heart: nothing said about loss... 2005
Joel A. Holt TREAT ALL MEN ALIKE : AN ANALYSIS OF UNITED STATES V. WHITE MOUNTAIN APACHE TRIBE AND SUGGESTIONS FOR TRUE REPARATION 38 Akron Law Review 413 (2005) Great nations, like great men, should keep their word. In 1492, Christopher Columbus landed on the shores of the New World. He brought with him dreams of gold, a sword, fire and disease. In doing so, he began the systematic annihilation of the Western Hemisphere's indigenous people. The torture and genocide of Native Americans, motivated by... 2005
Jocelyn B. Garovoy Ua Koe Ke Kuleana O Na Kanaka (Reserving the Rights of Native Tenants): Integrating Kuleana Rights and Land Trust Priorities in Hawaii 29 Harvard Environmental Law Review 523 (2005) For Hawaii-based conservation land trusts, kuleana lands present both unique opportunities and complex challenges to land conservation efforts. Kuleana lands are those parcels granted to native Hawaiian tenant farmers between 1850 and 1855. Rights attaching to these special lands include: reasonable access, agricultural uses, gathering rights,... 2005
Kevin McCulloch , April Winecke WINNER, BEST APPELLATE BRIEF IN THE 2004 NATIVE AMERICAN LAW STUDENT ASSOCIATION MOOT COURT COMPETITION 29 American Indian Law Review 215 (2004-2005) 1) Is there an Existing Indian Family, necessary under the Congressional Intent for the application of the Indian Child Welfare Act, where the Indian parent does not live on the reservation of the tribe in which he/she is enrolled and his/her children have never resided on the reservation and have no relationship with the culture, society, or... 2005
William Bradford "ANOTHER SUCH VICTORY AND WE ARE UNDONE": A CALL TO AN AMERICAN INDIAN DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE 40 Tulsa Law Review 71 (Fall 2004) In 279 B.C., Pyrrhus, King of Epirus, a city-state in Greece, was summoned by the people of Tarentum, a Greek colony in southern Italy, to aid them against the tyranny of Rome. At the Battle of Asculum, Pyrrhus defeated the Roman legions after two days of bloody combat in which he lost a great many of his most competent officers and many of his... 2004
Bethany R. Berger "POWER OVER THIS UNFORTUNATE RACE": RACE, POLITICS AND INDIAN LAW IN UNITED STATES v. ROGERS 45 William and Mary Law Review 1957 (April, 2004) C1-5Table of Contents L1-4,T4Introduction 1960 I. L2-4,T4The Rogers Decision 1965 II. L2-4,T4Unmasking the Law 1970 A. L3-4,T4Indian Law Before Rogers in Congress and the Court 1970. B. L3-4,T4Back to the Facts 1981. 1. Developing the Test Case. 1982 2. Fabricating a Jurisdictional Gap. 1992 3. Prosecuting the Dead Defendant. 1998 III. L2-4,T4The... 2004
Sharona Hoffman IS THERE A PLACE FOR "RACE" AS A LEGAL CONCEPT? 36 Arizona State Law Journal 1093 (Winter 2004) What does race mean? The word race is omnipresent in American social, political, and legal discourse. The concept of race is central to contemporary debate about affirmative action, racial profiling, hate crimes, health inequities, and many other issues. Nevertheless, the best research in genetics, medicine, and the social sciences... 2004
Summer Kupau Judicial Enforcement of "Official" Indigenous Languages: a Comparative Analysis of the Mori and Hawaiian Struggles for Cultural Language Rights 26 University of Hawaii Law Review 495 (Summer, 2004) I ka 'olelo no ke ola; I ka 'olelo no ka make. In the language rests life; In the language rests death. Ka ngaro te reo, ka ngaro taua, pera i te ngaro o te Moa. (If the language be lost, man will be lost, as dead as the moa.) In his 1993 federal employment discrimination lawsuit, Native Hawaiian attorney William E.H. Tagupa, although fluent in the... 2004
Danielle Conway-Jones Mongolia, Law Convergence, and the Third Era of Globalization 3 Washington University Global Studies Law Review 63 (2004) In the Spring of 2002, I received a call from a colleague in the School of Hawaiian, Asian, and Pacific Studies at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa. My colleague wanted to gauge my interest in joining a university delegation to travel to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia at the request of the Mongolian Government and the Academy of Management. The invitation... 2004
Denise E. Antolini Punitive Damages in Rhetoric and Reality: an Integrated Empirical Analysis of Punitive Damages Judgments in Hawaii, 1985-2001 20 Journal of Law & Politics 143 (Spring 2004) Punitive damages have replaced baseball as our national sport. -- Theodore B. Olson The public gets anecdotal glimpses of atypical cases without a sense of their overall significance. . . . Simplistic sound bites have displaced systematic analysis. -- Deborah L. Rhode [Civil jury trial] data suppl[y] a crucial empirical dimension to an array... 2004
Stephanie A. Gonzalez Ferrandez REPRESENTING DIVERSE CLIENTS 27-FALL Family Advocate 14 (Fall, 2004) Ms. Smith, there are two people here to see you. There is a Mr. Kadir who says that his neighbor, Mrs. Nuggusie, is from Ethiopia and she wants a divorce from her husband. Mr. Kadir says that they got your name from his boss. Cindy, the paralegal Whitehall, Ohio Mr. Jones, Professor Swamidoss is calling to make an appointment to discuss a custody... 2004
Jennifer L. Arnett The Quest for Hawaiian Sovereignty: an Argument for the Rejection of Federal Acknowledgement 14-FALL Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 169 (Fall, 2004) Originally called the Sandwich Islands, the Hawaiian Islands have a long history of civilization and government. The Hawaiian people have been part of a robust political community for almost two centuries. The first Europeans arrived on the islands in 1776 and discovered that the Native Hawaiian people, whose population was estimated at more than... 2004
Jon M. Van Dyke THE ROLE OF CUSTOMARY INTERNATIONAL LAW IN FEDERAL AND STATE COURT LITIGATION 26 University of Hawaii Law Review 361 (Summer, 2004) Now that economic globalization is both a reality and a matter of intense controversy, it is appropriate and useful to examine the process of legal globalization, and how this development affects litigation in the federal and state courts of the United States. U.S. courts embraced international law enthusiastically in the early years of our... 2004
William Bradford "WITH A VERY GREAT BLAME ON OUR HEARTS": REPARATIONS, RECONCILIATION, AND AN AMERICAN INDIAN PLEA FOR PEACE WITH JUSTICE 27 American Indian Law Review 1 (2002-2003) In a post-September 11th era riven by ethno-nationalism, territorial revanchism, and religious terror, the United States has assumed the mantle of leadership in articulating the moral, political, and legal norms that will inform reconstruction of global security architecture. Defense of human rights, whether motivated by its contribution to the... 2003
Mark Levin , Teruki Tsunemoto A COMMENT ON THE AINU TRUST ASSETS LITIGATION IN JAPAN 39 Tulsa Law Review 399 (Winter 2003) The white world of abstract symbols became a nightmare for Indian people. Vine DeLoria Litigation regarding trust assets against the United States government on behalf of Native Americans has a counterpart in Japan. The Ainu Trust Assets litigation was filed in July 1999 in Sapporo District Court by Ainu activist Ryukichi Ogawa and twenty-three... 2003
Crystal K. Glendon A Political Solution for a Legacy under Attack: the Akaka Bill's Potential Effect on the Kamehameha Schools 26 University of Hawaii Law Review 69 (Winter 2003) Round one went to the Kamehameha Schools (Kamehameha) in its epic battle to preserve its Hawaiians-only admission policy. On November 17, 2003, United States Senior District Judge Alan Kay granted Kamehameha's motion for summary judgment against an anonymous minor who challenged the validity of Kamehameha's century-old admissions policy.... 2003
Robert Gerard , OCBA President Aloha for Lawyers-follow the Spirit, It's the Law 45-APR Orange County Lawyer Law. 4 (April, 2003) I NOW KNOW WHY THERE IS so much Aloha in Hawaiiit's the darn law. When I first heard that Hawaii had a state law that actually required folks to follow the Aloha Spirit, I found it difficult to believe. How could such an ineffable spirit be described in words, no less be quantified in a state statute? Well, believe it or not, some years ago (1986... 2003
Eric K. Yamamoto , Susan K. Serrano , Michelle Natividad Rodriguez AMERICAN RACIAL JUSTICE ON TRIAL--AGAIN: AFRICAN AMERICAN REPARATIONS, HUMAN RIGHTS, AND THE WAR ON TERROR 101 Michigan Law Review 1269 (March, 2003) Few questions challenge us to consider 380 years of history all at once, to tunnel inside our souls to discover what we truly believe about race and equality and the value of human suffering. --Kevin Merida (on African American reparations) Secretary of State Colin L. Powell said today that terrorists can only be attacked from the highest moral... 2003
Leslye E. Orloff, Mary Ann Dutton, Giselle Aguilar Hass, Nawal Ammar BATTERED IMMIGRANT WOMEN'S WILLINGNESS TO CALL FOR HELP AND POLICE RESPONSE 13 UCLA Women's Law Journal 43 (Fall/Winter 2003) This Article examines the barriers that battered immigrant women face when contacting the police for assistance in stopping or escaping intimate partner violence. It analyzes partial results from a large-scale research project undertaken by Ayuda, Inc. from 1992 to 1995 meant to assess the needs of immigrant Latinas in the Washington D.C.... 2003
M. Casey Jarman , Robert R.M. Verchick Beyond the "Courts of the Conqueror": Balancing Private and Cultural Property Rights under Hawai'i Law 5 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Minority Issues 201 (Spring 2003) I. Introduction. 201 II. Brief History of Hawaiian Property Regimes. 203 A. History of Hawaiian Property Regimes. 203 III. From Kalipi to Ka Paakai. 207 IV. Applying Ka Paakai. 211 A. Case Studies: Kaupulehu and Destination Villages Kauai. 211 1. The Context. 211 2. Kaupulehu. 212 3. Destination Villages Kauai (Kapalawai). 214 V. Beyond the... 2003
  Constitutional Law -- Voting Rights -- Native Hawaiians -- Ninth Circuit Invalidates Office of Hawaiian Affairs Trustee Requirement. -- Arakaki V. Hawaii, 314 F.3d 1091 (9th Cir. 2002) 116 Harvard Law Review 2694 (June, 2003) Recent debates over slavery reparations and affirmative action have trained a spotlight on the issue of redressing historical wrongs committed against discrete communities. Because so many historical rights violations occurred on the basis of race or ethnicity, attempts to remedy these wrongs often employ racial classifications. Courts have found... 2003
Arthur L. Stinchcombe Cultures of Discipline: Law Teaches Hawaii to Become a Colony 28 Law and Social Inquiry 591 (Spring 2003) Sally Engle Merry. 2000. Colonizing Hawaii: The Culutual Power of Law. Princeton N.J.: Princeton Universtiy Press. Sally Merry's Colonizing Hawaii tells us about the nineteenth-century penetration of Hawaii by colonial cultures and structures while the island was still independent. Neocolonialism before Colonialism might be an alternative title.... 2003
Naomi Mezey ERASURE AND RECOGNITION: THE CENSUS, RACE AND THE NATIONAL IMAGINATION 97 Northwestern University Law Review 1701 (Summer 2003) The census is one of our relatively few national, secular ceremonies. It provides a sense of social cohesion, and a kind of non-religious communion: we enter the census apparatus as individual identities with a handful of characteristics; then later we receive from the census a group snapshot of ourselves at the ceremony date. -- William Kruskal... 2003
Alex Tallchief Skibine INTEGRATING THE INDIAN TRUST DOCTRINE INTO THE CONSTITUTION 39 Tulsa Law Review 247 (Winter 2003) The Indian trust doctrine has had a long love-hate relationship with Indian tribes. On one hand, it has been used to sue the executive agencies of the federal government for breach of trust. On the other, it has been used to expand the plenary power of Congress over Indian affairs. While some scholars have argued that the trust doctrine should be... 2003
  INTERNATIONAL LAW AS AN INTERPRETIVE FORCE IN FEDERAL INDIAN LAW 116 Harvard Law Review 1751 (April, 2003) Although the political branches have recently adopted policies that favor Indian tribal self-determination, the judicial doctrines defining the extent of inherent tribal sovereignty and the federal government's power over tribes remain severe obstacles for tribes seeking to govern themselves and maintain their cultural integrity. These doctrines... 2003
Kara M.L. Young Kamehameha's Hawaiians-only Admissions Policy under 42 U.s.c. § 1981: a Permissible Pursuit of Practical Freedom 26 University of Hawaii Law Review 309 (Winter 2003) Classification on the basis of race has been a suspect practice in this country for nearly half a century. Nevertheless, the Kamehameha Schools (Kamehameha), the multi-billion dollar trust created by the will of Bernice Pauahi Bishop (Princess Pauahi), prefers Hawaiians in its admissions policy. Admission to Kamehameha is highly coveted, so in... 2003
William S. Richardson, School of Law University of Hawai‘i at Manoa, Honolulu Hawai‘i Native Prospects: Symposium on Challenges Facing the Hawaiian Community Today 4 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal 598 (June 1, 2003) This symposium, a collaboration between the Asian-Pacific Law & Policy Journal (APLPJ) and Aha Hui O Hawaii (the Native Hawaiian Law Student Association), marks the second such event in as many years. While last year's symposium examined the U.S. Supreme Court's Rice v. Cayetano decision, this year we chose to focus on a broad spectrum of issues... 2003
Jennifer Van Trump Protecting the 'Rainforests of the Sea': Creating the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Coral Reef Ecosystem Reserve by Executive Order 11 Penn State Environmental Law Review 273 (Summer 2003) A nation behaves well if it treats natural resources as assets which must be turned over to future generations increased not impaired in value. -- Theodore Roosevelt -- Coral reefs are consolidated living colonies of microscopic organisms found in warm tropical waters. As the colonies grow, underwater reefs are formed by both the living and dead... 2003
Brian Duus Reconciliation Between the United States and Native Hawaiians: the Duty of the United States to Recognize a Native Hawaiian Nation and Settle the Ceded Lands Dispute 4 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal 469 (June 1, 2003) A. The Legal Framework of Federal Recognition B. Land Base of a Native Hawaiian Nation Consisting of Ceded Lands 1. Initial provisions for a land base 2. History of the ceded lands A. Federal Recognition of the Native Hawaiian Government is Constitutional 1. Congress has the power to treat Native Hawaiians the same as Indian Tribes 2. The... 2003
Robin Kundis Craig Taking Steps Toward Marine Wilderness Protection? Fishing and Coral Reef Marine Reserves in Florida and Hawaii 34 McGeorge Law Review 155 (Winter, 2003) I. L2-5,T5Introduction 157 II. L2-5,T5Overfishing and Degradation of the Oceans 161 A. L3-5,T5Ocean Resources and Recognition of Ocean Degradation 161 B. L3-5,T5Overfishing as the Primary Cause of Marine Ecosystem Degradation 162 III. L2-5,T5Marine Protected Areas, Marine Reserves, and Marine Regulatory Goals 166 A. L3-5,T5Nations' Legal Authority... 2003
Nancy C. Staudt TAXPAYERS IN COURT: A SYSTEMATIC STUDY OF A (MISUNDERSTOOD) STANDING DOCTRINE 52 Emory Law Journal 771 (Spring 2003) When urban planners in Northern California first proposed a bridge to link Marin County and the City of San Francisco, taxpayers objected arguing the project was a colossal waste of public money. They apparently believed boats were a sufficient means of transportation to cross the bay. The taxpayers failed in their efforts to block the construction... 2003
Rebecca Tsosie TRIBALISM, CONSTITUTIONALISM, AND CULTURAL PLURALISM: WHERE DO INDIGENOUS PEOPLES FIT WITHIN CIVIL SOCIETY? 5 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law 357 (January, 2003) The effort of modern political theory to understand multiculturalism has engendered a variety of responses, depending upon the theoretical tradition (e.g., liberalism, communitarianism) and the nature of the group (e.g., immigrant groups, descendants of slaves, indigenous peoples). Contemporary political philosophers struggle with two primary... 2003
Paul M. Sullivan "RECOGNIZING" THE FIFTH LEG: THE "AKAKA BILL" PROPOSAL TO CREATE A NATIVE HAWAIIAN GOVERNMENT IN THE WAKE OF RICE v. CAYETANO 3 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal 4 (July, 2002) I. Introduction II. Rice v. Cayetano III. The Akaka Bill A. Legislative History B. Core Elements of the Bill C. Critique of the Akaka Bill 1. Mancari, Sandoval and the Lack of a True Tribe 2. Adarand and the Constitutional Test of Strict Scrutiny 3. Omissions and Ambiguities in the Bill 4. The Lack of Resources for the Governing Entity IV.... 2002
Anthony (T.J.) F. Quan "RESPETA I TAOTAO TANO" : THE RECOGNITION AND ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SELF-DETERMINATION AND SOVEREIGN RIGHTS OF THE INDIGENOUS CHAMORROS OF GUAM UNDER INTERNATIONAL, FEDERAL, AND LOCAL LAW 3 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal 3 (Winter 2002) A. The History of Guam and the Chamorros 1. Arrival of the Ancient Chamorros and Establishment of Culture and Society 2. The Spanish Conquest and Colonial Period 3. The 19th to 20th Centuries: Guam as a U.S. Territory, the Japanese Insurgence, and Its New Social, Political, and Economic Makeup 4. The Chamorro Community, Culture, Heritage, and... 2002
R. H K Lei Lindsey Akaka Bill: Native Hawaiians, Legal Realities, and Politics as Usual 24 University of Hawaii Law Review 693 (Summer, 2002) This land is ours, our Hawai'i. Shall we be deprived of our nationality? More than 104 years have passed since Native Hawaiians united in protest to support their nation-the Hawaiian Kingdom-and to oppose annexation to the United States. The century since has witnessed significant changes that have had a detrimental impact on the Native Hawaiian... 2002
John Heffner Between Assimilation and Revolt: a Third Option for Hawaii as a Model for Minorities World-wide 37 Texas International Law Journal 591 (Summer 2002) I. Introduction. 591 II. History of Hawaii. 594 A. From Sovereign Nation to U.S. State. 594 B. The Office of Hawaiian Affairs. 597 III. Rice v. Cayetano--The Battle for Indian Classification. 598 A. Rice v. Cayetano. 598 B. Response to Rice v. Cayetano. 600 IV. Native American Law Offers Only a Partial Solution. 601 A. Native American Law as a... 2002
Paul Adams , Susan M. Chandler Building Partnerships to Protect Children 40 Family Court Review 503 (October, 2002) A collaboration between Hawaii's Family Court and Child Protective Services resulted in statewide adoption of a form of family group conferencingcalled 'Ohana Conferencingwhich involves immediate and extended family, child welfare professionals, and others in a process of planning for the safety of children. The authors describe this model, its... 2002
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