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As a lieutenant in the US Navy Reserve, he penned an essay entitled "Sovereignty of the Liuchiu Islands" in which he asserted that [[Commodore Perry]] and other agents of the United States actively, intentionally, ''chose'' to treat the [[Ryukyu Kingdom]] as an independent kingdom in their interactions with Ryukyu in the 1850s, and that the post-WWII American Occupation of Okinawa was, in an important sense, a return to that friendly stance, opposed to Japanese colonialism and supportive of Okinawan distinctiveness, decolonization, and autonomy.<ref>Tze May Loo, ''Heritage Politics: Shuri Castle and Okinawa's Incorporation into Modern Japan, 1879-2000'', Lexington Books (2014), 150-151.; Kerr, "Sovereignty of the Liuchiu Islands," ''Far Eastern Survey'' 14:8 (1945), 96-100.</ref>
 
As a lieutenant in the US Navy Reserve, he penned an essay entitled "Sovereignty of the Liuchiu Islands" in which he asserted that [[Commodore Perry]] and other agents of the United States actively, intentionally, ''chose'' to treat the [[Ryukyu Kingdom]] as an independent kingdom in their interactions with Ryukyu in the 1850s, and that the post-WWII American Occupation of Okinawa was, in an important sense, a return to that friendly stance, opposed to Japanese colonialism and supportive of Okinawan distinctiveness, decolonization, and autonomy.<ref>Tze May Loo, ''Heritage Politics: Shuri Castle and Okinawa's Incorporation into Modern Japan, 1879-2000'', Lexington Books (2014), 150-151.; Kerr, "Sovereignty of the Liuchiu Islands," ''Far Eastern Survey'' 14:8 (1945), 96-100.</ref>
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Following the end of World War II, he served for a time as vice consul at the US consulate in Taipei. He was a vocal critic of the [[Guomintang]] (KMT, Chinese Nationalist Party), and after the KMT violently suppressed popular protest in the 2-28 Incident of 1947, Kerr returned to the United States. He then worked for the Hoover Institution at the University of Washington for a time, and contributed to a study of the US military administration of the [[Ryukyu Islands]], publishing his first book on Okinawa in 1956. He also oversaw another such study, the [[Ryukyu Cultural Survey]], in 1960 to 1962.
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Following the end of World War II, he served for a time as vice consul at the US consulate in Taipei. He was a vocal critic of the [[Guomintang]] (KMT, Chinese Nationalist Party), and after the KMT violently suppressed popular protest in the 2-28 Incident of 1947, Kerr returned to the United States. He returned to Okinawa by 1952, however, surveying sites and monuments across the archipelago and producing ''Ryukyu Kingdom and Province before 1945'', a survey of Okinawan history meant to serve as a textbook for use in classrooms in Okinawa under the USCAR Occupation government.<ref>Loo, 154.</ref>
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He then worked for the Hoover Institution at the University of Washington for a time, and contributed to a study of the US military administration of the [[Ryukyu Islands]], producing his first book on Okinawa in 1956. He also oversaw another such study, the [[Ryukyu Cultural Survey]], in 1960 to 1962.
    
Kerr donated numerous books, documents, and photographs to the University of the Ryukyus Library over the course of the 1950s to 1980s. These continue to be maintained today at that university library as the "Kerr Collection" (''Kerr bunko'').
 
Kerr donated numerous books, documents, and photographs to the University of the Ryukyus Library over the course of the 1950s to 1980s. These continue to be maintained today at that university library as the "Kerr Collection" (''Kerr bunko'').
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