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The center is involved in a number of innovative, collaborative
projects involving faculty and staff from other institutions within
and outside the region, such as the University of the South Pacific,
the University of the West Indies, and the East-West Center. These collaborative
projects expand the outreach of the center, enhance learning opportunities
for our students, and capitalize on the strengths of the resources at
each institution. Recent collaborative projects include
Pacific Alternatives is a research program headed
by Edvard Hviding, an anthropologist with the University of Bergen
Pacific Studies Research Group. The project will examine contemporary
connections in the Pacific between expanding perceptions of cultural
heritage and the emergence of new political forms, in response to challenges
of global political economy. The project includes components of training
and education, scholarship programs for students and scholars from
Pacific Island nations, scholarly and financial support of cultural
centers and museums in the Pacific Islands, a series of international
conferences, and a publication and dissemination program that includes
a “virtual museum” and a range of educational materials for use in
schools and distance learning in the Pacific Islands. The project is
funded by the Research Council of Norway. In addition to the the University
of Bergen and the UHM Center for Pacific Islands Studies, major partners
include the UHM Department of Anthropology, the East-West Center Pacific
Islands Development Program, the Solomon Islands National Museum, the
Vanuatu Cultural Centre, the British Museum, and the James Cook University
Department of Anthropology, Archaeology, and Sociology.
As a part of the the Pacific Alternatives research program,
an international conference, "Pacific
Alternatives: Cultural Heritage and Political Innovation in Oceania," was
held in Honolulu, Hawai`i, 24–27 March 2009.
Islands of Globalization is a collaborative
research and instructional project of East-West Center’s Pacific
Islands Development Program and the Center for Pacific Islands Studies,
funded by the Ford Foundation. The project seeks to enhance understandings
of the origins, nature, and consequences of globalization from the
perspective of small island societies, and in the context of changing
notions of "islandness." Islands
of Globalization focuses on the Caribbean and Pacific regions, and
pursues pedagogical, policy, and popular research that engages different
types of audiences: intellectuals, academics, and students; artists;
policy makers; and members of the general public. The project has established
collaborative relationships with educational institutions in the Pacific
and Caribbean, including the University of the South Pacific, the University
of Papua New Guinea, and the University of the West Indies, to explore
historical and contemporary linkages between the regions, and to develop
shared curricula. Other outcomes include faculty and student exchanges,
scholarly publications, and multimedia products. Some of the conceptual
issues are explored in a graduate seminar on globalization offered by
the Center for Pacific Islands Studies, and in a parallel speaker and
film series that includes speakers from the Caribbean and Pacific. Center
faculty Terence Wesley-Smith is a member of the Islands
of Globalization planning team. For more information visit the project
website.
Center faculty participated in the Global Seminar
sponsored by the United Nations University, based in Japan, and the
School of Hawaiian, Asian and Pacific Studies (SHAPS) at UH Mānoa in
2004. The 2004 theme was “Negotiating
Pacific Identities: Ethnicity, Encounters and Self-determination,” and
the seminar involved students from across the Pacific region. Vilson
Hereniko and former CPIS faculty member Katerina Teaiwa delivered keynote
addresses, and Terence Wesley-Smith served on the SHAPS organizing committee
(see videos). In 2005 the theme was “Consuming
Cultures: Change, Tradition and Choice in Asia and the Pacific,” and
the seminar mainly involved students from Asia with a few from the
Pacific Islands and Hawai‘i. The theme and structure of the
2005 seminar was partly based on Katerina Teaiwa’s courses, Culture
and Consumption in Oceania (PACS 492) and Islands of Globalization (PACS
690). The UNU Global Seminar offers students and young professionals
the opportunity to creatively interact with each other and scholars across
Asia and the Pacific by focusing on crosscutting contemporary cultural,
political, and economic issues.
Moving Cultures is a research and teaching
project committed to developing innovative forms of area studies focused
on the Asia-Pacific region. The SHAPS–based project is directed
by center faculty member Terence Wesley-Smith and was funded from 1997
to 2003 by the Ford Foundation as part of its Crossing Borders initiative.
Collaborative relations have been established between the University
of Hawai‘i and seven
other universities and colleges in Asia and the Pacific, including the
University of the South Pacific in Fiji, Palau Community College, as
well as the University of Canterbury and Victoria University of Wellington
in New Zealand. Project members have developed regional learning communities
using Web-based interactive courses or course modules, established exchange
programs, held conferences and workshops, and produced publications on
area studies issues. For more information, please contact Terence
Wesley-Smith.
Not to be confused with our earlier “Moving Cultures” project, Culture
Moves! Dance in Oceania from hiva to hip hop started as an international
dance conference and performance event sponsored by the University of
Hawai'i at Mānoa, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa,
and Victoria
University of Wellington. It is now a collaborative project linking dance
companies, communities, musicians, educators, choreographers, and researchers.
The goals of Culture Moves! are to facilitate links between
dance communities and institutions, to promote dance as an essential
component of Pacific development and education, and to consolidate Pacific
dance studies resources. Culture Moves! embraces all dance genres
practiced by Pacific peoples, including traditional, contemporary/modern
dance, and hip hop. The Culture Moves! website is available
to post notices, articles, images, and reflections on dance practices
by Pacific peoples. Contact Katerina
Teaiwa for further information.
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