Army Rule and Martial Law in Hawaii, 1941-1946
CONSTITUTIONAL LIBERTY IN WORLD WAR II: ARMY RULE AND MARTIAL LAW IN HAWAII, 1941-1946 BY HARRY N. SCHEIBER AND JANE L. SCHEIBER The tragic story of the Japanese-American internments in World War II is now indelibly marked in the chronicles of American history-a dreadful episode in repression, with no timely protection extended to the victims by the nation's courts, during a war fought in the name of universal freedoms. 1 Harry N. Scheiber is associate dean and professor of law, and chairman of the Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program, in the Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley. Jane L. Scheiber is director of development in the College of Chemistry, UC Berkeley. This article is drawn from the authors' research for a forthcoming book on wartime martial law in Hawaii. The authors are grateful for most generous assistance and advice to the staffs of the Hawaii State Archives, Special Collections of the University of Hawaii at Manoa, the Hawaii State Library, the Library of Congress Manuscripts Division, the National Archives !Washington, D.C.; Suitland, Md.; and San Bruno, Calif.), the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library (Hyde Park, N.Y.), and the Bancroft Library of the University of California at Berkeley. Chris Carr, student in the Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program, Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley, provided expert research assistance. Special thanks are owed, for access and guidance to materials, to Dr. Michaelyn Chou of the University of Hawaii Library. © Harry N. Scheiber and Jane L. Scheiber, 1990 1 Peter Irons, fustice at War: The Story of the fapanese-American Internment Cases (New York, 198-3) [hereafter cited as Irons, fustice at War] offers the full 342 WESTERN LEGAL HISTORY VOL 3, No.
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