Native Hawaiian Law - A Treatise Product Description:
Native Hawaiian Law: A Treatise discusses and analyzes the critical events, cases, statutes, regulations, and actions that form and give substance to a body of law affecting Kanaka Maoli, the Native Hawaiian people. This highly anticipated follow-up to the 1991 Native Hawaiian Rights Handbook covers a number of important topics including: • Native Hawaiians and U.S. Law • Public Land Trust • Water Rights • Traditional and Customary Access and Gathering Rights • Hawaiian Home Commission Act • Judicial Methods for Securing Land Title • Native Hawaiian Health • Hawaiian Language and Education, and much more
The breadth and depth of Native Hawaiian Law offers new pathways for further research and analysis of critical legal issues facing the Native Hawaiian community today.
Native Hawaiian Law: A Treatise is a collaborative effort of the Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation, KaHuli Ao Center for Excellence in Native Hawaiian Law at the William S. Richardson School of Law – University of Hawaii at Manoa, and Kamehameha Publishing. Availability | 24 August 2015 | Category | Business & Personal Affairs | Page Count | 1,420 pages | Publisher | Kamehameha Publishing Printed in China | Publish Date | August 2015 | Dimensions | 10.0” x 7.0” x 2.25” | Edited by | Melody Kapilialoha MacKenzie with Susan K. Serrano and D. Kapua‘ala Sproat | About the Authors | Richard W. Hazlett is a geology professor at Pomona College in Claremont, California. He has been an interpretive ranger at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, a research technician at the Hawaii Volcano Observatory and a geology professor at the University of Hawaii at Hilo.
Donald W. Hyndman is co-founder of the Roadside Geology series, books that bring geology to the general public. When he is not writing or editing books, Hyndman teaches geology at the University of Montana in Missoula. | Binding | Softcover | ISBN 13 | 9780873363426 | |