Abstract: The Fairfax Resolves, invoking “the Laws of Nature and Nations,” are often portrayed as among the first statements of the colonists’ natural rights. The idea that civil law should be founded on natural law, however, dated back to Cicero and had long been invoked by colonial writers. Yet the Resolves played a pioneering role in mediating a dispute about how natural law underwrote the colonists’ civil rights. The first clause argued that if Virginia was a “conquered Country” then its “present Inhabitants are the Descendants not of the Conquered, but of the Conquerors” and thus inherited rights to property and self-government earned exclusively by their conquering “Ancestors.” During the revolutionary years, though, some writers, such as Virginian Richard Bland, further argued that the original “Adventurers” had created new and independent states rather than colonies (a “free state” theory of colonization), while others argued that the first colonists had settled under the authority of the crown (a “charter theory” of colonization). Free-state theory, with its claim for no original crown authority in American territory, had the advantage of making American independence easier to approve under the laws of nature and nations. But it remained controversial, and the Fairfax Resolves pioneered an ambiguous language about the origins of colonies that appeared later in the account of “the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here” in the Declaration of Independence. The Resolves’ conquest theory also had profound implications for Native Americans and westward expansion by shaping an American empire after the Revolution.



Abstract: This paper provides an analysis of Indonesia’s settler colonial project in West Papua, examining its systematic dismantling of Papuan cosmobian societies across eight ontological domains: the physicalmaterial, the biological-organismic, the cultural-mythological, the metaphysical-transcendental, the techno-scientific, the space-time-conscious, the domain of ultimate mystery, and the domain of memory. Grounding its analysis in the Psycho-Cosmocide theoretical framework developed by the author, and drawing on the Lani concept of Inaorak (verified cosmological belonging, from root word Inawi [home, land, space] and Worak [exist, verified, ontologically valid]) as its primary indigenous epistemological foundation, the paper argues that Indonesia’s administrative proliferation of provinces, regencies, districts, and village units across West Papua constitutes not a bureaucratic rationalisation but a systematic ontological dissection of Papuan identity, memory, and cosmological jurisdiction. The paper traces the history of naming violence from the Netherlands New Guinea era through to the 2022 creation of four new provinces and the now sixty-plus administrative units, documents the function of the transmigration programme as demographic warfare, analyses the militarisation of space as ontological enclosure, and examines the instrumentalisation of religious institutions as vectors of cognitive-semiotic erasure. The paper concludes that Papuan resistance lacks not vision, language, or alternative institutions but the one thing the settler programme will never willingly grant: the power to execute an alternative reality. Only a Wonesis—a cosmological return to the self-verified ground of Papuan being—can constitute the beginning of genuine reconstruction.




Abstract: This dissertation examines the political, rhetorical, and affective dimensions of wildfire governance in the western United States through three interrelated studies that together constitute a critical account of what I call “apparatuses of fire”: the discursive, institutional, and logistical structures immanent to the material existence of landscape fire which have shaped relationships to landscape fire in the U.S. over the past century. Chapter One analyzes the visual rhetoric of the Smokey Bear fire prevention campaign, the longest-running public service advertising campaign in U.S. history, as a site where human-animal difference is systematically constructed and naturalized. Drawing on Heidegger’s distinction between human “world-forming” and animal “captivation,” the chapter argues that Smokey Bear posters position fire prevention not merely as a civic duty but as an ontological imperative grounded in the exclusive agential capacity of humans over captivated nonhuman animals. Through close visual analysis of nonhuman animals in Smokey Bear posters, the chapter traces how representations of animality evolve in response to shifting environmental policy while consistently maintaining the foundational structure of human exceptionalism that underwrites the campaign’s central message: “Only You Can Prevent Forest Fires” because non-human animals cannot. Chapter Two offers a political-theoretical account of modern state fire governance as a biophysical state of exception constituted through the inclusive-exclusion of what I call “proscribed fire.” Adapting Giorgio Agamben’s theory of exception (1998) to the domain of environmental governance, and combining it with Paul Virilio’s (2006) dromological analysis of speed and logistics, the chapter argues that the U.S. Forest Service has governed fire-prone landscapes since the Great Fires of 1910 by simultaneously including fire as an exogenous limit-figure and deploying ever-greater logistical speeds to maintain territorial control. This framework illuminates both the fire exclusion era (1910–1970) and the subsequent turn toward ecosystem-based management as continuous expressions of settler continuance (Whyte, 2018) rather than genuine paradigm shifts. The chapter concludes by examining the emergence of AI-driven fire surveillance and autonomous management technologies as the latest iteration of a dromocratic logic that threatens to further marginalize Indigenous and community-based approaches to fire stewardship. Chapter Three turns from state institutions to ordinary people as decision-makers, drawing on twenty-three long-form narrative interviews with rural Inland Northwest residents personally affected by wildfire. Drawing on Lazarus’s principle (2016) of “people think,” the chapter argues that the emotions rural residents feel in response to wildfire — frustration, compassion, and gratitude — are not merely affective reactions to adverse circumstances but autonomous forms of pyropolitical thought capable of exposing, and operating beyond, the structural limits of normative governance and its forms of knowledge. Taken together, the three chapters advance a critical pyropolitics attentive to the ontological assumptions, logistical imperatives, and affective dimensions of U.S. wildfire governance, and call for alternative relationships to fire grounded in ecological reciprocity, Indigenous sovereignty, and genuine community autonomy.


Abstract: In this chapter, we examine how the Israeli military’s deployment of artificial intelligence (AI) systems—most notably the Lavender targeting program—operates as a contemporary extension of settler-colonial power that intentionally produces and conceals mass disablement. Situating these technologies within frameworks of racial capitalism, militarism, and ableism, we argue that algorithmic “precision-targeting” not only effectuates widespread impairment but also naturalizes this violence through the rhetoric of objectivity. Drawing on critical disability studies, crip theory, and settler-colonial critique, our analysis unfolds in three parts. First, we historicize the continuum from rubber-bullet maiming during the Great March of Return to AI-driven decision-support systems, showing how algorithmic thresholds of “tolerable error” encode political choices about whose bodies may be maimed rather than killed. Second, we unpack the epistemic logics of AI models; datasets, predictive heuristics, and minimal human oversight, to reveal how Palestinian lives are rendered killable and maimable data points. Third, we extend our critique globally, linking Palestine’s experience to analogous AI-enabled surveillance and debilitation in other regions. By foregrounding Palestinian disabled experience as a generative site for theorizing the co-constitution of disability, colonialism, and technology, this chapter contributes to peripheral crip critique and disability justice scholarship. We conclude by calling for a radical crip politics and transnational solidarity that rejects techno-colonial violence and reclaims AI futures centered on care, interdependence, and collective liberation.







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