UH Manoa Campus Events Calendar
Indigenous Politics Speaker Series-J.Kehaulani Kauanui
June 14, 7:00pm - 8:00pmManoa Campus, Kamakakuokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies Halau o Haumea
The Politics of Hawaiian Blood: Genealogical Descendants and Racialized Beneficiaries.
The State of Hawai`i currently defines "native Hawaiian" by a fifty-percent blood quantum rule. This legal definition originated in the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act of 1921, which allotted approximately 200,000 acres of land for eligible "native Hawaiians" defined as those "descendants with at least one-half blood quantum of individuals inhabiting the Hawaiian Islands prior to 1778" (Hawaiian Homes Commission Act, 1920).
Blood quantum is a fractionalizing measurement that entails the assumption that one's "blood amount" indicates one's cultural orientation and identity. Blood quantum classification is a calculation of "distance" in relation to some supposed purity: how closely can someone compute their generational proximity to a "full-blood" forebear (4/4, ½, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32, and so on)?
While some assume genealogy is a proxy for race, blood quantum classification as a marker for race, is often used as a proxy for ancestry. In dominant American society, genealogy is assumed to be the same as blood notions and racial identity. But what about Hawaiian discourses of identification in relation to genealogy and notions of blood?
A look at Hawaiian genealogy and kinship practices can open up meaningful ways of engaging indigenous concepts of identity. This lecture will explore the deep cultural resonance blood quantum classification continues to have in day to day lives of indigenous Hawaiian people and operates in both cultural and legal contexts.
Event Sponsor
Political Science, Kamakakuokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies, Ethnic Studies, William S. Richardson School of Law, Anthropology, Ahahui o Hawaii, Kualii Counc, Manoa
More Information
Misti Pali, 956-6569, indpols@hawaii.edu, Event Poster (PDF)
| Tuesday, June 14 | |
| 12:30pm | UH Department of Medicine Grand Rounds Queen's Conference Center (510 S. Beretania St.,2nd Floor Lobby) |
| 2:00pm | Federal Grant Writing Workshop Series Manoa, Honolulu, Kapiolani, Leeward, Maui, Hilo |
| 4:00pm | Groundwater Bioremediation Seminar Holmes Hall 244 |
| 7:00pm | Indigenous Politics Speaker Series-J.Kehaulani Kauanui Kamakakuokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies Halau o Haumea |
