Colonizing Hawai'i

Colonizing Hawai'i
Author: Sally Engle Merry
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 392
Release: 2000-01-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780691009322

How does law transform family, sexuality, and community in the fractured social world characteristic of the colonizing process? The law was a cornerstone of the so-called civilizing process of nineteenth-century colonialism. It was simultaneously a means of transformation and a marker of the seductive idea of civilization. Sally Engle Merry reveals how, in Hawai'i, indigenous Hawaiian law was displaced by a transplanted Anglo-American law as global movements of capitalism, Christianity, and imperialism swept across the islands. The new law brought novel systems of courts, prisons, and conceptions of discipline and dramatically changed the marriage patterns, work lives, and sexual conduct of the indigenous people of Hawai'i.

The Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander Population, 2000

The Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander Population, 2000
Author: Elizabeth M. Grieco
Publisher:
Total Pages: 12
Release: 2001
Genre: Demographic surveys
ISBN:

This report, part of a series that analyzes population and housing data collected from Census 2000, provides a portrait of the Pacific Islander population in the United States and discusses its distribution at both the national and subnational levels.

Journal

Journal
Author: Hawaii. Legislature. Senate
Publisher:
Total Pages: 774
Release: 1903
Genre:
ISBN:

Beyond Identities: Human Becomings in Weirding Worlds

Beyond Identities: Human Becomings in Weirding Worlds
Author: Jim Dator
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2022-08-31
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 3031117328

This book is an argument for moving beyond culturally/historically/ethnically/biologically-grounded identity as the necessary foundation of an authentic self. It highlights examples of people who are attempting to inhabit identities they feel are more appropriate to themselves, by deploring the damage done via claims about authentic identity. The sole theme of this book is “becoming beyond identity”. We are not fixed human beings but rather perpetually-dynamic human becomings. As intelligence is enabled or recognized beyond the merely human, we should welcome our continuing evolution from homosapiens, sapiens, into many varieties of intelligences on Earth and the cosmos. This book builds from tiny ripples into a tsunami of examples from conventional identity studies, to Confucian human becomings, to apotemnophilia, to DIY biohacking, to cyborgs, to artilects, to hiveminds, to intelligence in animals, plants and fungi from the Holocene through the beginnings of the precarious, climate change-driven Anthropocene Epoch, with hints far beyond and throughout the cosmos. From a lifetime of work in future studies, anticipation science and space studies, the author balances frank tales of his own experiences and beliefs concerning his uncertain and fluid identities with those of others who tell their stories. In addition to material from academic and popular sources, a few poems further illuminate the scene.