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Beamer, Ali‘i Selective Appropriation of Modernity-Examining Colonial Assumptions In Hawai‘i Prior to 1893, AlterNative An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples (5) pp. Beamer, Ke ao naʻauao maoli, Aboriginal Education World, No. Gonschor, Toward an inventory of ahupua‘a in the Hawaiian Kingdom: A survey of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century cartographic and archival records of the island of Hawai‘i, The Hawaiian Journal of History, vol. Tong, The Mahele Did What? Hulili Multidisciplinary Research on Native Hawaiian Well Being, vol. Burns’ Crown Lands Trust Article, University of Hawai‘i Law Review, vol. Osorio, Sullying the Scholar’s Craft: An Essay and Criticism of Judge James S. Sustainability, Sustainable Use of the Environment and Resources, Special Issue on Biocultural Restoration in Hawaiʻi. The Moku System: Managing biocultural resources for abundance within social-ecological regions. Al Engaging Indigenous Agency Through Collaborative Management to Achieve Effective Conservation in Hawaiʻi. al. Reflections on Sustainability Concepts: Aloha ʻĀina and the Circular Economy. Sustainability. K.Beamer, Axel Tuma, Kawena Elkington, et.International and National Peer Reviewed Journals Beamer, No Mākou Ka Mana-Liberating the Nation, Kamehameha Publishing, (2014). Beamer, Waiwai-Water and the Future of Hawai‘i, (Under Contract University of Hawaiʻi Press Tau. Islands and Cultures: How Pacific Islands Can Influence How We Understand The World, Yale Press (In Press). Te Maire Tau of the University of Canterbury is in production with Yale University Press. Peter Vitousek of Stanford University, and Dr. His second book, an edited volume in collaboration with Dr. Kamakau Book of the Year Award from the Hawai‘i Book Publishing Association. In addition to numerous academic publications, in 2014 Beamer published No Mākou ka Mana: Liberating the Nation, which received multiple awards including the Samuel M. He has previously served as president and chief executive officer of The Kohala Center, director of ‘Āina-Based Education at Kamehameha Schools, and director of Stanford University’s First Nations Futures Institute. In this position, he will continue to advance aloha ʻāina locally–and at an international level–through research, policy, and community partnerships that address food systems and waste, water resources, and Circular Economies. Beamer began serving a five-year appointment as the inaugural Dana Naone Hall Endowed Chair in Hawaiian Studies, Literature, and the Environment. After eight years of service, accomplishments include the restoration of water for forty-five streams across Hawaiʻi. In June 2021, he concluded two consecutive terms as a Commissioner on the Hawaiʻi State Water Resource Management Commission. By prioritizing community-centered engagement, AAEF has advised economic development strategies centered around aloha ʻāina since April 2020. Beamer is one of the fourteen co-founders of ʻĀina Aloha Economic Futures (AAEF), an initiative with the goal of uplifting Hawaiian values to guide economic recovery efforts. This international knowledge exchange has guided recent work exploring how aloha ʻāina as an indigenous philosophy, and the CE as a modern economic approach, can inform each other in enacting systemic economic change and transitioning to a more sustainable and equitable society.ĭr. Beamer has an ongoing international collaboration in the study of the Circular Economy (CE) in partnership with colleagues from the University of Augsburg. Beamer’s research interests and publications focus on indigenous agency, governance, Native Hawaiian land tenure, Hawaiian resource management, and land and resource law of the Hawaiian Kingdom. Richardson School of Law as part of Ka Huli Ao Center for Excellence in Native Hawaiian Law. He serves a dual appointment in the Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge and in the William S. Kamanamaikalani Beamer, PhD, is a full professor in the Hui ʻĀina Momona Program at the University of Hawaiʻi-Mānoa.