The Okinawan archipelago plays a crucial role in today’s rapidly changing Asia Pacific region, yet its history and contemporary significance remain insufficiently reported, debated and understood in the English-speaking world. The Translocal Island of Okinawa sheds crucial new light on Okinawan history, society and politics, and on the long struggle of Okinawan residents to protect the peace and the unique environment of their archipelago. This book also goes further, presenting an innovative perspective on the formation of identity and solidarity in grassroots movements across regional and national boundaries. Its analysis of Okinawan translocalism will be of great value to scholars of citizens’ activism around the world.