Bayonets in Paradise: Martial Law in Hawai"i during World War II

Harry Scheiber,Jane Scheiber

Bayonets in Paradise: Martial Law in Hawai"i during World War II
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University of Hawai'i Press
Country
United States
Published
29 February 2016
Pages
512
ISBN
9780824852887

Bayonets in Paradise: Martial Law in Hawai"i during World War II

Harry Scheiber,Jane Scheiber

Bayonets in Paradise recounts the extraordinary story of how the army imposed rigid and absolute control on the total population of Hawaii during World War II. Declared immediately after the Pearl Harbor attack, martial law was all-inclusive, bringing under army rule every aspect of the Territory of Hawaii’s laws and governmental institutions. Even the judiciary was placed under direct subservience to the military authorities. The result was a protracted crisis in civil liberties, as the army subjected more than 400,000 civilians-citizens and alien residents alike-to sweeping, intrusive social and economic regulations and to enforcement of army orders in provost courts with no semblance of due process. In addition, the army enforced special regulations against Hawaii’s large population of Japanese ancestry; thousands of Japanese Americans were investigated, hundreds were arrested, and some 2,000 were incarcerated. In marked contrast to the well-known policy of the mass removals on the West Coast, however, Hawaii’s policy was one of
selective,
albeit preventive, detention.

Army rule in Hawaii lasted until late 1944-making it the longest period in which an American civilian population has ever been governed under martial law. The army brass invoked the imperatives of security and
military necessity
to perpetuate its regime of censorship, curfews, forced work assignments, and arbitrary
justice
in the military courts. Broadly accepted at first, these policies led in time to dramatic clashes over the wisdom and constitutionality of martial law, involving the president, his top Cabinet officials, and the military. The authors also provide a rich analysis of the legal challenges to martial law that culminated in Duncan v. Kahanamoku, a remarkable case in which the U.S. Supreme Court finally heard argument on the martial law regime-and ruled in 1946 that provost court justice and the military’s usurpation of the civilian government had been illegal.

Based largely on archival sources, this comprehensive, authoritative study places the long-neglected and largely unknown history of martial law in Hawaii in the larger context of America’s ongoing struggle between the defense of constitutional liberties and the exercise of emergency powers.

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