Jamaica Heolimeleikalani Osorio
Assistant Professor, University of Hawai’i Department of Political Science, College of Social Sciences, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
I am a Kanaka Maoli aloha ʻāina educator, activist, and artist whose ʻohana has been living, working, and bettering Hawaiʻi since time immemorial. My kūpuna were aliʻi, makaʻāinana, activists, educators, firefighters, laborers, pastors, artists, composers, community organizers, social service providers, storytellers, and weavers. Most importantly my kūpuna were committed members of their lāhui. I emerge from this genealogy primed and ready to continue to take forward the charge of contributing to a Hawaiʻi’s whose future is decolonial, deoccupied, demilitarized, and bursting with possibility.
Education
PhD, English, University of Hawaiʻi, 2018
MA, Art and Politics, New York University, 2013
BA, Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, Stanford University, 2012
Courses
POLS 140: Introduction to Indigenous Politics
POLS 301: Hawai‘i Politics
POLS 302: Native Hawaiian Politics
POLS 684: Contemporary Native Hawaiian Politics
Research
As an educator committed to the decolonization in Hawaiʻi and beyond, I believe it is my kuleana to produce research that actively (re)members the personal, genealogical, and scholarly relationship between Hawaiʻi and our ʻohana in Oceania. While much of my academic background is rooted in a respectful study of an Indigenous politics and theory primarily rooted in Turtle Island and Hawaiʻi, I recognize that our own decolonization will demand re-situating Hawaiʻi back home in Oceania, rather than within an American political context, and therefore a context of occupation.
Community Engagement
I am an Aloha ʻĀina. My work within our university is meant, first and foremost, to serve our lāhui beyond the institution. In order to teach about Hawaiʻi, Hawaiian and Indigenous Politics, it is our kuleana to remain connected and in service, to the communities, these politics affect most.