Hawaiian Sovereignty: Thinking Carefully About It
http://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/
This site offers a comprehensive examination of the issues ranging from pre-Hawaiian settlement of the Islands through Rice vs. Cayetano and beyond. Ken Conklin's site will have relevance for anyone interested, pro or con, in Hawaiian sovereignty.
Aloha for All
http://www.aloha4all.org/
This site explores discriminatory racial policies, equal protection under the law, entitlements, ceded lands revenues, "stolen lands" and the "illegal annexation."The creators of this web site are H. William Burgess and his wife, Sandra Puanani Burgess. Sandra is Chinese-Filipino-Hawaiian, born and raised in Hawai'i. Bill is an attorney and was a delegate to the 1978 Constitutional Convention which created OHA. He had then, and continues to have, grave doubts about the fairness, wisdom and constitutionality of OHA and other preferential treatment programs.
Nation of Hawai'i
http://www.hawaii-nation.org/
While we do not endorse any Hawaiian sovereignty group, the Nation of Hawai'i's web site provides very comprehensive information: news, legal and legislative action, important historical and legal documents from the Kingdom, Republic, Territory, and State and well as U.S. and international documents. It also has a very comprehensive and informative directory links to Hawaiian cultural and sovereignty sites.
Office of Hawaiian Affairs
http://www.oha.org/
Under the direction of nine trustees elected statewide, OHA has functioned operationally as both a government agency with a strong degree of autonomy, and as a trust. Unlike the Bishop Estate, the Queen Emma Foundation, the Queen Lili`uokalani Trust, the Lunalilo Trust and the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands—with their specific, respective purposes of education, medical care, children’s welfare, kupuna care and homesteading—OHA has a much broader mandate. Its purpose is to provide the opportunity for a better life and future for all Hawaiians.
The Hawaiian Historical Society
http://www.hawaiianhistory.org/
Founded in 1892, the Hawaiian Historical Society is dedicated to preserving historical materials relating to Hawai‘i and the Pacific region and to publishing scholarly research on Hawaiian and Pacific history. In addition, the Society presents lectures and other programs, free to the public, on various aspects of Hawaiian history.
In Pursuit Of...
http://www.grassrootinstitute.org/publications/documents/InPursuit200303.pdf
The Grassroot Institute, at the above link, provides a four-page summary , entitled" A Race to Racism?", of Attorney Paul Sullivan's seminal analysis of the Akaka Bill. Sullivan, an attorney here for over 20 years, provides a more detailed discussion of the bill as well as citations to legal and historical source materials in the full analysis in booklet form, entitled "Killing Aloha". The Grassroot article tells how to get the more detailed version but this summary provides a thorough and objective review of the problems we all face with the Akaka Bill.