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“Ngugi wa Thiong’o:
Teacher, Comrade, and Revolutionary,” in Ngugi
in the Americas, Ed. Timothy Reiss (Trenton, New
Jersey: Africa World Press, forthcoming 2005).
“Restitution As a Precondition of Reconciliation: Native Hawaiians
and Indigenous Human Rights,” in Should America
Pay? Slavery and the Raging Debate over Reparations, Ed. Raymond
A. Winbush (New York: Amistad/HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.,
2003).
“Indigenizing Human Rights," in Dialogue of Civilizations: A New Peace Agenda for
A New Millennium,
Eds. Majid Tehranian
and David Chappell (London: I.B. Tauris Publishers, 2002).
“Native Social Capital: The Case
of Hawaiian Sovereignty and Ka Lähui Hawai‘i,” Policy
Sciences (The
Netherlands), Guest Eds. John D. Montgomery and Alex
Inkeles, Vol. 33, 2000.
“Settlers of Color and “Immigrant” Hegemony: “Locals” in
Hawai‘i,” Amerasia Journal, Vol. 26,
No. 2, 2000.
“What is Native Hawaiian Art?” Rampike
Arts & Literary
Magazine (Canada), Vol. 11, No. 2, 2000.
“Sovereignty
and Security for the First Nations,” in
Asian Peace: Security and Governance
in the Asia-Pacific Region,
Ed. Majid Tehranian (London: I. B. Tauris Publishers,
1999), pp. 168-172.
“Decolonizing Hawaiian Literature,” in
Inside Out: Literature, Cultural Politics, and Identity
in the New Pacific,
Eds. Vilsoni Hereniko and Rob Wilson (Philadelphia: Rowman & Littlefield
Publishers, Inc., 1999), pp. 167-182.
“Writing
in Captivity: Poetry in a Time of Decolonization,” in
Inside Out: Literature, Cultural
Politics, and Identity in the New Pacific,
Eds. Vilsoni Hereniko and Rob Wilson (Philadelphia:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.,
1999), pp. 17-26; a longer version appears
in “Navigating Islands and Continents:
Conversations and Contestations in and around
the Pacific,” Volume
17 of Literary Studies East and West,
Eds. Cynthia Franklin, Ruth Hsu, and Suzanne
Kosanke
(Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i
Press, 2000).
“The Dog That Runs in the Rough
Seas,” in Intimate
Nature: The Bond Between Women and Animals,
Eds. Linda Hogan, Deena
Metzger, and Brenda Peterson (New York:
Ballantine, 1998), pp. 37-45.
“Feminism and
Indigenous Hawaiian Nationalism,” Signs:
Journal of Women in Culture and Society,
Fall, 1996, pp. 906-916; reprinted in Feminist Nationalism, Ed. Lois A.
West (New York:
Routledge, 1997), pp. 187-198.
“Native
Sovereignty: A Strategy for Hawaiian
Family Survival,” in
Resiliency in Ethnic Minority
Families: Native and Immigrant American
Families, Volume 1, Eds. McCubbin, Thompson and
Thompson, Fromer, (University of Wisconsin
System: Center
for Excellence
in Family Studies, 1995), pp. 133-143.
“Malama ‘Aina:
Protect the Land,” in
Global Visions,
Eds. Jill Cutler, John Brown Childs,
Jeremy Brecher
(South End Press, 1993), pp. 127-131.
“Kupa‘a ‘Aina:
Native Hawaiian Nationalism in
Hawai‘i,” in
Politics and Public Policy
in Hawai‘i,
Eds. Dick Pratt and Zachary Smith
(SUNY Press, 1992), pp. 243-260.
“Racism Against Native Hawaiians at the University of Hawai‘i,
A Personal and Political
View,” Amerasia
Journal,
Volume 18:3, 1992, pp. 33-50.
“Lovely Hula Hands: Corporate
Tourism and the Prostitution of Hawaiian Culture,” Border/Lines,
No. 23, 1991/1992, pp. 22-29.
“Coalitions Between Natives
and Non-Natives,” Stanford
Law Review, Vol. 41, 1991.
“The
Politics of Academic Freedom as the Politics of White Racism,” in
Restructuring for
Ethnic Peace,
Ed. Majid Tehranian (Honolulu:
Matsunaga Institute for
Peace, 1991), pp. 11-23.
“Hawai‘i: Selling the
Erotic as Smut,” AMPO,
Japan-Asia Quarterly
Review, Volume 22, No. 4, 1991, pp. 11-16.
“Natives and
Anthropologists: The Colonial Struggle,” Contemporary
Pacific, Volume 3,
No. 1, Spring 1991, pp. 111-117.
“Politics in the Pacific
Islands: Imperialism and Native Self-Determination,” Amerasia
Journal, Volume 16,
1990, pp. 1-20.
“Empowerment of Pacific People,” in
Peace and Development: An Interdisciplinary
Perspective,
eds. Daniel S. Sanders and
Jon Matsuoka (Honolulu:
University of Hawai‘i Press,
1989), pp. 133-139.
“Colonization
and De-Colonization in Hawai‘i,” in
Class
and Culture in
the South Pacific, ed. Antony Hooper (Institute
of Pacific Studies: University of the South
Pacific, Fiji,
1987), pp. 154-174.
“The Birth of the Modern Hawaiian Movement: Kalama Valley, O‘ahu,” Hawaiian
Journal of History, Volume 21, 1987, pp. 126-153.
“From a Native Daughter,” in
The American Indian and the Problem of History, ed. Calvin
Martin (Oxford University Press: New York, 1987), pp. 171-179;
also published in Re-reading
America, Eds. Columbo, Cullen, Lisle (St. Martins
Press:
Boston, 1992, reprinted 1995).
“Hawai‘i:
Cambiando los Objetivos de
las Mujeres de Hawai‘i,” Boletin
del Grupo Internacional de
Trabajo Sobre Asuntos Indigenas,
Volume 6, Nos. l/2, Junio
1986, pp. 84-89.
“Hawaiians,
American Colonization,
and the Quest for Independence,” Social
Process in Hawai‘i,
Volume 31, 1984/85, pp.
101-137.
“Indigenous Writers
and the Colonial Situation,” Pacific
Islands Communication
Journal, Volume 13, No.
l, 1984,
pp. 77-83.
“Fighting the
Battle of Double Colonization:
The View of a Hawaiian
Feminist,” in
Critical Perspectives
of Third World America, Annual
Journal of Ethnic Studies (University
of California at Berkeley),
2 (1984), pp. 196-213;
also published
in Ethnies:
Review of
Survival International,
Spring, 1989, in English
and French, pp. 61-67.
“Cultures
in Collision: Hawai‘i
and England, 1778,” Pacific
Studies, Volume 7,
No. l, 1983, pp.
91-118.
“The Office
of Hawaiian Affairs:
Self-Determination
or State Dependency?” Social
Process in Hawai‘i,
Volume 30, 1983,
pp. 104-112.
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