With a chapter by Michael Phillips on Transitional justice in settler states: Claudio Corradetti, Nir Eisikovits (eds), Theorizing Transitional Justice, Routledge 2016
04Mar16
Filed under: Uncategorized | Closed
- 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
- Born settler-colonial, not yet capitalist: James Parisot, How America Became Capitalist: Imperial Expansion and the Conquest of the West, Pluto Press, 2019
- Where do indigenous economies fit? Sarah A. Radcliffe, ‘Geography and Indigeneity III: Co-articulation of Colonialism and Capitalism in Indigeneity’s Economies’, Progress in Human Geography, 2019
- Breaking the settler contract one duck at a time: Miranda Johnson, ‘The Case of the Million-Dollar Duck: A Hunter, His Treaty, and the Bending of the Settler Contract’, The American Historical Review, 124, 1, 2019, 56–86
- Indigenous water and indigenous life: Christina Boyles, Hilary E. Wyss, ‘Water Is Life: Ecologies of Writing and Indigeneity’, Studies in American Indian Literatures, 30, 3-4, 2018, pp. 1-9
- The responsibility of teaching the history of settler colonialism: James Miles, ‘Teaching History for Truth and Reconciliation: The Challenges and Opportunities of Narrativity, Temporality, and Identity’, McGill Journal of Education, 53, 2, 2018, pp. 294-311
- Settler colonial modernism in the face of revolution: Bradley Flis, Border Ends: Anti-Imperialism, Settler Colonialism, And The Mexican Revolution In U.S. Modernism, PhD Dissertation, Wayne State University, 2018
- Culture and water protectors: Edwin López, ‘Race, Culture, and Resistance at Standing Rock: an Analysis of Racialized Dispossession and Indigenous Resistance’, Perspectives on Global Development and Technology, 18, 1-2, 2019
- A settler-colonial history prompts a geography of responsibility: Michelle Daigle, ‘The spectacle of reconciliation: On (the) unsettling responsibilities to Indigenous peoples in the academy’, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 2019
- The settler’s ‘dreamwork’: May Chew, ‘Phantasmagoric City: Technologies of Immersion and Settler Histories in Montreal’s CitéMémoire’, Public, 29, 58, 2018, pp. 140-147
- Still on settler-colonial biopolitics and its failures: James Boucher, ‘Neoliberal Biopolitics in Michel Noël’s Nipishish: Market Logic and Indigenous Resistance’, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 42, 2, 2018, pp. 77-96
- Settler-colonial biopolitical control against Indigenous refusal: Sheila Collingwood-Whittick, ‘Settler Colonial Biopolitics and Indigenous Resistance: The Refusal of Australia’s First Peoples “to fade away or assimilate or just die”’, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 42, 2, 2018, pp. 11-38
- On settler-colonial biopolitics: J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, ‘Afterword: A Response Essay’, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 42, 2, 2018, pp. 97-102
- Settler-colonial biopolitics in Australia: René Dietrich, ‘Introduction: Settler Colonial Biopolitics and Indigenous Lifeways’, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 42, 2, 2018, pp. 1-10
- Decolonising as a joint effort: Mirjam B. E. Held, ‘Decolonizing Research Paradigms in the Context of Settler Colonialism: An Unsettling, Mutual, and Collaborative Effort’, International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 18, 2019, 1–16
- Capturing the border: Liam Midzain-Gobin, ‘Decolonizing Borders’, E-International Relations, 12/01/19
contribute