settler colonial studies blog
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« Decolonising local relationships; an example? Janelle Young, Reimagining Mi’kmaq-State Relations: Facing Colonialism at the Mi’kmaq-Nova Scotia-Canada Tripartite Forum, MA thesis, Dalhousie University, 2015
Decolonising settler and non-settler colonialisms: Natacha Gagné, ‘Brave New Words: The Complexities and Possibilities of an “Indigenous” Identity in French Polynesia and New Caledonia’, The Contemporary Pacific, 27, 2, 2015, pp. 371-402 »

Settler colonialism in Europe: Liina Lukas, ‘Who Holds the Right to the Land? Narratives of Colonization in Baltic-German and Estonian Literatures’, in Andreas Beer, Gesa Mackenthun (eds), Fugitive Knowledge: The Loss and Preservation of Knowledge in Cultural Contact Zones, Waxmann Verlag, 2015, pp. 65-82

30Aug15

Link to the book.

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  • Settler colonialism is a global and transnational phenomenon, and as much a thing of the past as a thing of the present. Settlers 'come to stay': they are founders of political orders who carry with them a distinct sovereign capacity.
  • If you're a scholar, and you find some of your work featured on the blog, then chances are that we want it for our journal.
  • what’s new

    • The living archive: Rita Orihuela-Anaya, Meenakshi Richardson, Gladys Gamarra, Angela Alva, Hernán Lauracio Ticona, Carlos Arosquipa Rodriguez, Magaly M Blas, ‘Mamás de la Frontera: Empowering perspectives of Indigenous community health workers along the Putumayo River in the Peruvian Amazon’, Journal of Community Systems for Health, 2, 2, 2025
    • The active archive: Rose Miron, Indigenous Archival Activism: Mohican Interventions in Public History and Memory, University of Minnesota Press, 2024
    • Always beware of the green settler: Grey Weinstein, Angel White, ‘Green Technologies, White Colonies: Zionism and the Colonial Uses of “Indigeneity” and “Environmentalism”’, Critical Zionism Studies, 2, 1, 2025
    • The climate crisis and the crisis of settler colonialism (with a chapter on the ‘History of Settler Colonialism’): Sarah Haley Knowles, Diminished Prosperity: How a Warming Planet Impedes Healthy Families, Communities, and Economies, Palgrave, 2025
    • An olive grove is not a pine forest: Christopher C. Jadallah, ‘What could be more innocent than planting trees? Thinking with Palestine in land education’, Curriculum Inquiry, 2026
    • Indigenising Argentina’s settler history: Robert Christensen, ‘Ethnohistory and Indigenous People on Argentina’s Southern Frontier: Pampas-Patagonia, 1810-1885’, History Compass, 2025
    • Žižek’s settler colonialism: Jamil Khader, ‘Universalizing Capital, Foreclosing Necro-Imperialism: Žižek’s Liberal-Zionist Response to the Gaza Genocide’, Middle East Critique, 2026
    • The settler local state and its representation: Karen Bird, Abbey Forbes, Gloria Liu, Maïa Rousseau, ‘Talk matters: local council debates over electoral reform for Indigenous representation in Canada and New Zealand’, Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance, 30, 2025
    • The settler state and the settler people: Richard Howson, Charles Hawksley, Nichole Georgeou, ‘Gramsci and “The Voice”: Closing the Gap Between “The Social” and “The Political” in Australia’s failed 2023 Referendum on Indigenous representation’, International Gramsci Journal, 6, 2, 2025
    • Settler colonial violence is gendered: Emily Grafton, Amber Fletcher, ‘Settler Colonial Saskatchewan and Gender based Violence Against Indigenous Women’, Journal of Critical Race Inquiry, 12, 2, 2025
    • The settler colonial future is bleak: Stefanus Galang Ardana, ‘Whose Apocalypse? Unfuturability and the Politics of Settler-Colonial Futurity in Western Apocalyptic Narratives’, Retorik, 13, 2, 2025
    • The port, and the settler hinterlands: Olivia Irena Durand, ‘Labour, trade, and settler colonisation: the role of Odessa and New Orleans on new imperial peripheries’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2025
    • The settler’s cosmopolitanism (cosmosettlerism): Fabián Flores Silva, ‘Kantian Cosmopolitanisms Encountering Isolated Indigenous Groups: Between Ambiguous Anti-colonialism and Risky Oversight’, Revista de ciencia política (Santiago), 45, 3, 2025
    • The settler’s anthropocentrism (settlerocentrism): Avlokita Sodhi, ‘The Settler’s Gaze: Patrick White and the Problem of Anthropocentrism’, Literary Endeavour, 2025, 119-123
    • And now, ending a massive year in settler colonialism (and inaugurating the Permanent Observatory on Settler Colonialism): Ohio Barbarian, ‘We Are All Indigenous Now: How financial cleansing supplanted ethnic cleansing in the United States’, 29/12/25
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