HULIAUAPA‘A
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Board of Directors
    • Staff
    • Partners
  • Wahi Kupuna Internship Program
    • Internship Application
    • 2010 ‘Ahu A ‘Umi, Hawaiʻi
    • 2011 Kahuwai, Puna, Hawaiʻi
    • 2012 Ka‘ūpulehu, Kona ʻĀkau, Hawaiʻi
    • 2013 Kohala, Hawaiʻi
    • 2014 Ka‘ū, Hawaiʻi
    • 2015 Hāmākua Hikina, Hawaiʻi
    • 2016 Pi‘opi‘o, Hilo, Hawaiʻi
    • 2017 Waiawa, Oʻahu
    • 2018 Hōnaunau & Keʻei, Hawaiʻi
    • 2019 Waipā, Kauaiʻi
  • Kali'uokapa'akai Collective
    • Think Tank >
      • Agenda
  • Projects
    • Native Hawaiian Leaders and the Papahānaumokuākea Marine Monument
  • Donations
  • Contact
  • Publications

Native Hawaiian Leaders and the Papahānaumokuākea Marine Monument

In 2017, Huliauapaʻa was awarded the NOAA Preserve America Initiative Funding (PAIIF) grant to lead a series of ethnographic interviews to document the formative history of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (PMNM). Our focus was gathering the moʻolelo and manaʻo of Native Hawaiian leaders who are responsible for the movement that resulted in effective advocacy and protection for the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI) from 2000 to present. These community leaders forged successful partnerships which led to the integration of Native Hawaiian cultural values and concepts into the Monument management. While focused on documeting the history of the monument, this project also helped gain insight into indigenous principles, philosophies, and unique epistemologies deeply embedded in native worldview and the relationship between people and place.
Specifically, this project captured the important roles that the Native Hawaiian community had in the historical timeline events with the establishment of :
 
  1. the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Coral Reef Ecosystem Reserve in 2000 by President Clinton;
  2. the NWHI Reserve in 2005 by the State of Hawai‘i;
  3. the NWHI Marine National Monument in 2006 by President Bush;
  4. the inscription of the region as the first, and currently only mixed (natural and cultural) UNESCO World Heritage Site in the U.S. in 2010; and
  5. the most recent proclamation for the expansion of the Monument in 2016 by President Obama.
 
The ethnographic interviews and videos that were produced will allow these stories to be available online and accessible through various media outlets, featured at various museums, and interpretive centers in Hawai‘i.
 
Huliauapa‘a consultation team members included Kepoʻo Keliʻipaʻakaua and Momi Wheeler, with additional support from Kalani Quiocho, NOAA Native Hawaiian Program Specialist. We are grateful to all the partners who collaborated on this project:
 
  • NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center – Socioeconomic Program;
  • NOAA NMFS Voices from the Fisheries;
  • NOAA MNFS PIRO Marine National Monument Program;
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service;
  • State of Hawai‘i Department of Land and Natural Resources;
  • and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs.
 
And a special mahalo piha to the OHA Print and Digital Media for all their hard work in editing and creating these beautiful short videos that will be available early 2019.
 
Return back to this site soon to see the video clips that were produced as part of this project!
 
Pipi holo ka ‘ao
The story is salted and preserved to run on….
Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Board of Directors
    • Staff
    • Partners
  • Wahi Kupuna Internship Program
    • Internship Application
    • 2010 ‘Ahu A ‘Umi, Hawaiʻi
    • 2011 Kahuwai, Puna, Hawaiʻi
    • 2012 Ka‘ūpulehu, Kona ʻĀkau, Hawaiʻi
    • 2013 Kohala, Hawaiʻi
    • 2014 Ka‘ū, Hawaiʻi
    • 2015 Hāmākua Hikina, Hawaiʻi
    • 2016 Pi‘opi‘o, Hilo, Hawaiʻi
    • 2017 Waiawa, Oʻahu
    • 2018 Hōnaunau & Keʻei, Hawaiʻi
    • 2019 Waipā, Kauaiʻi
  • Kali'uokapa'akai Collective
    • Think Tank >
      • Agenda
  • Projects
    • Native Hawaiian Leaders and the Papahānaumokuākea Marine Monument
  • Donations
  • Contact
  • Publications