Native Hawaiian Law: A Treatise (softcover)

978-0-87336-342-6

Regular price $50.00

Edited by Melody Kapilialoha MacKenzie, with Susan K. Serrano and D. Kapua‘ala Sproat

Native Hawaiian Law: A Treatise is the definitive resource for understanding critical legal issues affecting Native Hawaiians. This extensively revised and updated edition of the groundbreaking 1991 Native Hawaiian Rights Handbook offers a comprehensive overview and analysis of specific topics within this complex area of law including:

• Native Hawaiians and U.S. Law
• Native Hawaiians and International Law
• Public Land Trust
• Water Rights
• Traditional and Customary Access and Gathering Rights
• Burial Rights
• Hawaiian Homes Commission Act
• Island of Kaho‘olawe
• Indigenous Cultural Property
• Native Hawaiian Health
• Hawaiian Language and Education
• and much more

Native Hawaiian Law provides the tools to find relevant cases, statutes, and regulations impacting the rights of Native Hawaiians. It focuses on the relationship between Native Hawaiians and the state and federal governments; trust lands; vital areas of resource protection and management; protection of burials, repatriation, language, education, and health; and emerging human rights norms affecting indigenous peoples. This in-depth guide is an essential addition to the growing body of scholarship on indigenous peoples’ law.

Native Hawaiian Law: A Treatise is a collaborative effort of the Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation, Ka Huli Ao Center for Excellence in Native Hawaiian Law at the William S. Richardson School of Law–University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, and Kamehameha Publishing.

Softcover. 2015. 7 x 10". 1420 pp.
eBook (full volume) available for IOS and Kindle.
eBook chapters available here.