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Tides of Change: Mapping the Legacy of US Island Imperialism and Community Empowerment
Thursday, May 9, 2024
5:30-7:00 PM at Aliiolani Hale

Since the 19th century, the United States has laid claim to and exploited numerous islands worldwide, employing ambiguous legal terminology, exclusionary policies, and white supremacy to maintain control. Today, in addition to Hawaii, these island regions encompass the unincorporated territories of Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guahan (Guam), and American Samoa, where residents are denied full constitutional protections; and the freely associated states of Palau, Marshall Islands, and Federated States of Micronesia, whose citizens can live and work in the US without a visa, but must often navigate social, political, and economic discrimination to do so.

Despite being touted by the US government as “mutually beneficial”, island communities endure social, cultural, and environmental degradation from military occupation. From Pohakuloa on Hawaii Island to Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands, the US has treated ancestral homelands as weapons testing sites, meanwhile providing inadequate federal relief support following human- and climate-induced disasters, in places such as Puerto Rico, Maui, and the Northern Mariana Islands. The “Tides of Change” program convenes experts living and working in islands impacted by US imperialism to address shared obstacles and explore paths of resistance.

Photo caption: A Marshall Islander watches US Navy Seabees offload materials and tools on Enniburr Islet of Kwajalein Atoll in the Republic of the Marshall Islands, for the construction of a concrete evacuation center to serve as the Enniburr local community’s disaster preparedness building. (US Navy, 2019)

Part I: Thursday, May 9th

Today, US island imperialism manifests in regional militarization and roadblocks to self-determination. In Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Mariåna Islands, US forces are occupying new military installations, prompting anxiety, resistance, or sometimes accommodation. Meanwhile, debates over political status in Puerto Rico and American Sāmoa continue to expose the injustices facing people in unincorporated territories. In Part I of “Tides of Change: Mapping the Legacy of US Island Imperialism and Community Empowerment,” panelists discuss the legal, political, and community tools that Pacific Islanders use to navigate or subvert US imperialism.

Mahalo to our program co-sponsors: Brigham Young University-Hawaii’s Jonathan Napela Center for Hawaiian and Pacific Studies, and the University of Hawaii at Manoa’s Center for Biographical Research

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