Hawaiian journal
of
Law and Politics
The Hawaiian Journal of Law and Politics is an online, annual research journal published in association with the Hawaiian Society of Law and Politics. The journal is edited by graduate students from the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and faculty advisers. The Journal aspires to be a general journal that focuses on national and international issues of the Hawaiian State. The Journal also welcomes relevant articles or commentaries that evoke discussion. Each issue will normally contain: Articles, Comments, Essays and Notes, Recent Developments, Book Reviews, and Selected Documents. Authors are invited to consult the style guide and accepted papers are required to conform to the Journal's format.
journal volumes
- Volume I (Summer, 2004)
- Volume II (Summer, 2006)
- Volume III (Spring, 2021)
- Volume IV (Spring, 2022)
- Volume V (Fall, 2023)
volume IV
EDITOR'S NOTES – Dr. P. Kalawaiʻa Moore
ARTICLES
Aloha ‘Āina: From The Historical Record - Kauʻi Sai-Dudoit with Blaine Namahana Tolentino
Reaffirming Aboriginal Hawaiian Agency Towards English
Language Medium Schooling In The Hawaiian Kingdom - Dr. Larson Ng
Reconnecting Polynesian Kingdoms During The Age Of
Empire: Kalākaua, Pomare V And The Plan To Create A Tahitian Royal Order - Dr. Lorenz Gonschor
Native Hawaiian Indigenous Discourse:
Contained Resistance To Us Hegemony, Rejection Of The Hawaiian Kingdom Nation-state - Dr. P. Kalawaiʻa Moore
Backstory—larsen V. Hawaiian Kingdom At The Permanent Court Of Arbitration (1999-2001) - Dr. Keanu Sai
The Distinction Between State And Government - Dr. Edward Heath Robinson
The Law, The Plague And Colonial Hong Kong: The Development Of Political Identity In
Present Day Hong Kong - Dr. Xiang Gao, Dr. Guy C. Charlton
- © Hawaiian Society of Law and Politics 2021