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« Against inter-settler collaboration, indigenous internationalism! Ben Norton, ‘Palestinians support indigenous Dakota pipeline protests: “We stand with Standing Rock”’, Salon, 19/11/16
Indigenous sovereignty includes data sovereignty: Tahu Kukutai, John Taylor (eds), Indigenous Data Sovereignty: Toward and Agenda, ANU Press, 2016 »

On reconciliation and its limits: Sarah Maddison, Tom Clark, Ravi de Costa (eds), The Limits of Settler Colonial Reconciliation Non-Indigenous People and the Responsibility to Engage, Springer, 2016

25Nov16

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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

    • Demanding settlers: Chandra Murdoch, ‘Colonization Off-Reserve: Settler Petitions, Anishinaabe Capital Funds, and the Department of Indian Affairs in Ontario, 1854–1910’, Canadian Historical Review, 106, 4, 2025
    • Parallel settler colonialisms: Alison Holland, ‘Sacrificing Indigenous interests: solving the ‘native question’ in Australia and Palestine on the eve of the Second World War’, Settler Colonial Stduies, 2025
    • The torus against settler colonialism? Alex Prong, ‘The Torus Chronotope: Spatial Motif as Anticolonial Resistance in The Night Watchman’, Canadian Journal of Native Studies, 42, 2, 2025
    • Settler Gothic: Jamie Ashworth, ‘”A peculiar lustre”: The Gothic mode, settler colonialism and the environment, Wairarapa, New Zealand, 1841–53’, International Review of Environmental History, 11, 1, 2025, pp. 71-91
    • Building dispossession: Jasper Ludewig, Nathan Etherington, ‘Technologies of territory: Baker’s Australian County Atlas and the architecture of property’, Urban History, 2025
    • O settler Canada: David MacDonald, Emily Grafton (eds), On Settler Colonialism in Canada: Lands and Peoples, University of Regina Press, 2025
    • Women settlers: Kelly McMichael, ‘Redefining Frontier Womanhood: Irish Female Landownership in Mexican Texas’, Journal of Texas History, 1, 2, pp. 29-62
    • When home is where the settler is: Lisa Binkley (ed.), Dwelling on the Margins of Empire: Colonized and Indigenous Peoples’ Imaginaries of Home, Bloomsbury, 2025
    • A divided city (divided by settler colonialism, that is): Justine Skilling, John Reid, Steve Matthewman, ‘A tale of two cities: urban greening projects in a settler society’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2025
    • Unresponsive academics (i.e., unresponsive to genocide, scholasticide and settler colonialism): Nicola Pratt, ‘Scholasticide in Gaza: Settler Colonial Elimination, Genocide, and the Crisis of Academic Responsibility’, e-International Relations, 24/11/25
    • Settler colonialism in Plateau State: Anthony Ime Umoh, ‘Implications of Indigene–Settler Conflicts on Socio-Economic Activities in Plateau State, 2000–2010’, Global Journal of Modern Research Emerging Trends, 1, 5, 2025
    • Cosettlering in settler America: Ruth Hemstad, Terje Rasmussen (eds), Nordic Transatlantic Crossings Emigration, Interaction and Democracy 1825-1945, Routledge, 2026
    • Wakefield, Mill, Marx, settler colonialism: Philippe Gillig, ‘The Validity of Marx’s Critique of J. S. Mill’s Views on Systematic Colonization’, The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2025
    • Tourism settler colonialism: Casey Moran, Joelle Soulard, William Stewart, ‘Settler Colonialism in Authorized Heritage Discourses’, Journal of Travel Research, 2025
    • Decolonial mapping represents Indigenous narratives: Karina Craig, Kaela Stewart, ‘Re-Centring First Nations, Métis, and Inuit Narratives’, Technology, 2025, pp. 331-345
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