Skip to Main Content
UH Manoa Logo
Monica LaBriola's profile picture

Monica C. LaBriola

Associate Professor; Affiliate Faculty, Center for Pacific Island Studies; Affiliate Faculty, Indigenous Politics; Convener, Women in Pacific Studies (WiPS) Graduate Student Fellowship

she/her

Degrees: Ph.D., MA: University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa (2013, 2006); BA: University of California, Berkeley (1999)

Interests: Pacific/Oceania, Imperialism & Colonialism, Gender & Sexuality
Other Fields: Micronesia, Marshall Islands, Women and Gender, Ethnographic History, Oral Traditions, Pacific Historiography

Email: labriola@hawaii.edu

Phone: (808) 956-7675

Office:

Sakamaki B417

Accepting new graduate students? Depends; contact me to discuss

Background

Monica C. LaBriola earned a BA in Peace and Conflict Studies at UC Berkeley (1999), an MA in Pacific Islands Studies at UH Mānoa (2006), and a PhD in Pacific Islands History, also at UH Mānoa (2013). She maintains an active research agenda emphasizing oral traditions, women and gender, cross-cultural encounter, and historiography in the geographic region known as Micronesia in northern Oceania, with a focus on the Marshall Islands. She is also the founder and co-convener of the Women in Pacific Studies (WiPS) Graduate Student Fellowship, a supportive professionalization space for graduate students in Pacific studies and related fields. Her first monograph, tentatively titled Our Eyes Advise Us: Marshall Islanders Navigating Disease, Climate, and Colonial Violence in the Nineteenth Century, is near completion. Dr. LaBriola was the recipient of the inaugural Professor Brij V. Lal Award for the best paper published in The Contemporary Pacific for 2023, was a 2023 recipient of the University of Hawaiʻi Board of Regents Medal for Excellence in Teaching, and earned a UH – West Oʻahu Frances Davis Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching in 2017. Dr. LaBriola is currently a member of the editorial board of The Contemporary Pacific and the Journal of Pacific History and serves on the Pacific History Association executive committee. She has previously served as the associate editor for The Contemporary Pacific and as the series editor for the Teaching Oceania Series.

 

Course Offerings

  • HIST 288: Oceania Survey
  • HIST 366: Women in Oceania
  • HIST 481: Oceania I
  • HIST/PACS 675: Topics: Women in Oceania
  • HIST/PACS 675: Topics: Micronesia

 

Representative Publications