Abstract: Settler colonialism is a theory, policy, and practice in which settlers create new political orders on lands dispossessed from Indigenous peoples. Typically, an empire seeks to remove Indigenous inhabitants and replace them with settlers from the metropole in order to generate revenues from land sales, bolster sovereignty claims through occupation of territory, and, eventually, provide staples to help feed the metropole. In order to gain the land necessary for settler colonial projects, settlers need to remove Indigenous peoples: either through genocide, by restricting or removing Indigenous sovereignty and land base, or by conceptual erasure and forcible assimilation into the settler citizenry. While colonial settlement has existed since at least the beginnings of European colonization in the 15th century—and potentially much earlier—it has defined especially the 19th and early 20th centuries. British settler colonies (especially Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa) have all enforced similar policies of settler colonial dispossession. After providing a summary of the emergence of settler colonial studies as a discipline and definitions of settler colonialism, this article focuses mainly on settler colonial policy in Canada and British settler colonies generally. It shows that colonial settlement created a settler society based on the redistribution of land dispossessed from Indigenous nations to settlers perceived as desirable, and shaped immigration policy to recruit large numbers of settlers from Europe, ideally able-bodied farmers. Particular attention is paid to the distinction between colonial settlement and migration. Topics include dispossession and displacement; doctrines of discovery and occupation; imperial competition over colonies; the Homestead Act and the Dominion Lands Act; terra nullius; whiteness and desirability; and the emergence of “white settler colonies,” “neo-Europes,” and the “Angloworld” in the 19th century.



Abstract: The migration and adaptation of Italian settlers during and after decolonization offer valuable insights into the sociopolitical dynamics of empire’s end and its enduring legacies. Italian settlers navigated diverse trajectories, including repatriation to a war-torn metropole; adaptation to postwar Italy’s socioeconomic challenges; and continued settlement in former colonies such as Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Libya. These experiences reveal how colonial systems unraveled over time, complicating narratives of decolonization as a singular political event. Instead, Italian decolonization emerges as a prolonged and multifaceted process, shaped by migration, identity, and memory across generations and geographies. Comparative perspectives situate the Italian case within broader global patterns of settler colonial transitions, highlighting similarities and differences with other colonial powers, such as France, Portugal, and Britain. Theories from settler colonial studies frame this analysis, emphasizing the persistence of colonial structures and the challenges of dismantling settler hierarchies. Repatriation, often framed as a return to the homeland, was marked by logistical, economic, and emotional complexities, blurring the boundaries between exile and homecoming. Meanwhile, those settlers who remained in former colonies grappled with precarious positions in postcolonial societies, negotiating shifting power dynamics and evolving social relationships. This exploration underscores the importance of understanding decolonization not merely as the transfer of sovereignty but as an ongoing transformation embedded in cultural, economic, and institutional frameworks. The trajectories of Italian settlers, whether repatriating to Italy or remaining in former colonies, can only be fully understood within the context of decolonization as a long-term process. By examining these experiences over an extended timeline, it becomes clear how migration, memory, and identity intertwined to shape the collapse of Italy’s colonial empire and its enduring legacies in both metropolitan and postcolonial societies.


Description: How Alaska redefined US colonialism through Indigenous resistance and legal innovation. Long treated as the symbolic “last frontier,” Alaska was, in fact, the United States’s first experiment in overseas empire. Settler Imperialism reveals these concepts as fictitious stories promoted by government officials and offers a sweeping history of Alaska Native legal and political struggle in the face of a colonial structure that defied the norms of US expansion. Examining Alaska as both a settler and imperial space, Jess Arnett challenges familiar narratives of American growth, sovereignty, and law. Following the 1867 Treaty of Cession when the United States purchased Alaska from Russia, the federal government refused to sign treaties with Alaska Natives, excluded them from the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and denied the region designation as Indian Country. These departures from standard Indian policy created legal ambiguity that enabled new opportunities for land dispossession and resource extraction by state and corporate interests. Focusing on history from the late nineteenth century through the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, Arnett uncovers how the Tlingit, Haida, Tsimshian, and other Indigenous nations navigated—and contested—Alaska’s peculiar legal terrain. Members of these communities forcefully petitioned for US citizenship, mobilized Indigenous legal orders, and engaged selective federal Indian law to assert land rights and political authority. By placing Alaska at the center of US colonial history, Settler Imperialism turns a critical lens to the evolution of America. To understand US expansion, race, and legal formation, one must understand Alaska first as a proving ground for empire, not the last frontier.


Abstract: In the face of the ongoing genocide in Gaza, more scholars have begun to examine the situation in Gaza in particular from a genocide perspective, like never before. Given this proliferation of scholarship on Gaza/Palestine, this article addresses some of the fundamental issues that should be considered when addressing genocide in Palestine. Although the Israeli colonial policies are context-dependent, Gaza must be viewed as part of the overall settler- colonial context of Palestine. I argue in this paper that genocide research on Palestine, while scant until late 2023, has not adequately engaged Palestinian oral history and Indigenous epistemologies to theorise and examine settlers’ genocidal violence. I contend that Western scholarship in general drew on biased Israeli accounts that amplify the settler’s voice and discount the victim’s experiences. Rigorous genocide research should centre the voice of the latter through Indigenous oral history. I argue that the adoption of settlers’ narratives, in some cases though unwittingly, led to the reproduction of Zionist discourses. While the case of Palestine should be grounded in Indigenous frameworks, I stress the importance of examining the historical role of the empire in enabling settlers’ violence in Palestine. Raphael Lemkin highlighted the links between settler-colonialism, imperialism, and genocide. However, I suggest that Lemkin’s legacy should be further studied to decolonise him. Ultimately, I address three crucial issues in international law, including the Genocide Convention, that would decolonise the field and transform it into a site of liberation and hope for oppressed groups.



Description: For many, the conditions and privileges of citizenship, and the access it provides to equal civil, political and social rights, are taken for granted. Yet citizenship always implies histories of inclusion and exclusion and in settler nations with colonial roots, the history of citizenship is entangled with the legacies of colonisation. Looking beyond its legal definition to the wider historical processes through which citizenship and its associated ideas of rights and belonging have been imagined, debated and found lasting form, this collection considers the unique role of visual culture in defining, contesting and advancing ideas of citizenship in settler national contexts from the 19th century to the present day. Addressing citizenship’s particular entanglements with colonial histories in contemporary settler nations, the collection considers how images have shaped the meanings and experiences of citizenship from the colonial era, through periods of mass global migration to contemporary geopolitical change and debates on Indigenous rights and recognition. Contributors explore the role visual culture has played in imagining or interrogating ideas about belonging, rights, civic identity, and the ideal citizen in societies that continue to grapple with their settler colonial origins. They ask how image-making may be used to negotiate or contest the limits of citizenship, whether as a legal or as an imagined cultural category, and the role of visual culture in building relationships between citizens, non-citizens and the state. This collection will provide a new and compelling history of citizenship and the ways it has been defined, not only by historicising citizenship’s visual imagery but by exploring its present effects and legacies.




Abstract: This thesis investigates the German discourse surrounding Palestine. Using a conceptual framework combining ignorance, Orientalism and coloniality of power, it complicates previous research into the topic by unpacking the intricate connections between German Holocaust memory and Germany’s position of power within colonial power dynamics. To capture the ways in which both act together to create Germany’s discourse on Palestine, it develops the concept of militant ignorance which it defined as an active production of ignorance which militantly prevents an acknowledgement of ‘threatening’ knowledge and the reality it depicts. This research locates and identifies this German militant ignorance, its mechanisms and roots. In order to do so, it conducts a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) of news articles, broadcast contributions, social media posts, open letters and official statements relating to three case studies. These case studies are three discursive events surrounding Nemi El-Hassan in 2021, School for Unlearning Zionism in 2021 and Achille Mbembe in 2020. Each case study presents an incident of a cancellation, defunding or disinvitation campaign against individuals and groups voicing Palestinian experiences of Israeli settler colonialism and therefore (re)produces the epistemic and discursive erasure of Palestinians. The thesis finds that German militant ignorance is produced and maintained through ostracisation and persecution of those presenting Palestinian experiences of Israeli settler colonialism, and through epistemicide against the very body of knowledge of colonial realities in Palestine. It finds that this militant ignorance is rooted in both, German memory culture and its affects, and colonial power.




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