The End of Hawaii’s Plantations: Back to the Future?

Date

1996-03

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Publisher

ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science

Volume

544

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95

Ending Page

110

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Abstract

This article explores the response taken by Hawaii's people and society to workers displaced by the closing of sugar and pineapple plantations. Rooted in culture, history, and a labor market that is institutionally different from that of much of the United States, the response to structural unemployment is both unconscious and systematic. Also explored is the potential impact these closures can have on Hawaii's economy and society. Will Hawaii go back to the future and return to a society dominated by a business oligarchy such as existed throughout much of the plantation era? Or will it go back to the future as happened with the Democratic Revolution of 1954 and the birth of the modern Hawaiian economy? Can we distinguish between the two approaches today? These questions will be resolved based on whether Hawaii's people decide on a renewal of traditional ideas and beliefs or on an overthrow of these ideas.

Description

Modified from original published version to conform to ADA standards.

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Citation

Boyd, L. W., Jr. (1996). The End of Hawaii’s Plantations: Back to the Future? AAPSS, 544, 95-110.

Extent

21 pages

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Table of Contents

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States

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Local Contexts

Email libraryada-l@lists.hawaii.edu if you need this content in ADA-compliant format.