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In this episode, Hōkūlani Aikau explains how doing ethnographic research in the academy provided her with opportunities to learn from and about her various communities. As an ethnographer her approach is committed to understanding the experiences of the people with whom she works. Her training and experience have brought her to the Archipelago Collective and she explains how trans-Indigenous critical juxtaposition can be productive and synergistic and offers a foundation for thinking globally about planetary health without losing sight of the local, Indigenous context.
Dr. Hōkūlani Aikau is a Kanaka ‘Ōiwi Professor and the Director of the School of Indigenous Governance at the University of Victoria. She is the author of A Chosen People, A Promised Land: Mormonism and Race in Hawaiʻi (University of Minnesota Press, 2012). And with Vernadette V. Gonzalez, she coedited Detours: A Decolonial Guide to Hawaiʻi (2019). She and Dr. Gonzalez edit the Detours Series with Duke University Press. With Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark and Aimee Craft, she co-edited Indigenous Resurgence in the Age of Reconciliation. (University of Toronto Press, 2023). Dr. Aikau is also the Editor for the Pacific Islands Monograph Series with the University of Hawaiʻi Press.