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« The religious education of settlers: Stephen Jackson, Religious Education and the Anglo-World: The Impact of Empire, Britishness, and Decolonisation in Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, Brill, 2020
The settlers of Africa: Duncan Money, Danelle van Zyl-Hermann (eds), Rethinking White Societies in Southern Africa, 1930s–1990s, Routledge, 2020 »

The indigenous vs the settler commons: Susan Hegeman, ‘The Indigenous Commons’, Minnesota Review, 93, 2019, pp. 133-140

28Feb20

Abstract: The concept of the commons is central to an argument that connects indigenous people and their struggles both to global politics and to radical reconceptualizations of the relationships among knowledges, resources, and human communities. This article considers the use of the idea of a commons in water and atmosphere in the 2016 protest on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation against the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. It also contextualizes the concept of the commons in relation to the historical expropriation of land from native peoples in North America.

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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

    • Parking settler colonialism: Sarah Montoya, ‘Moving Toward Accountability: Challenging Settler Narratives through Interpretive Shifts and Tribal Engagement at Anza National Historic Trail’, Parks Stewardship Forum, 42, 1, 2026, pp. 101-110
    • The land eaters: Mansel G. Blackford, Land Hunger: Ohio and the Western Frontiers, Ohio University Press, 2025
    • The wreck of settler colonialism: Coll Thrush, Wrecked: Unsettling Histories from the Graveyard of the Pacific, University of Washington Press, 2025
    • Emasculating settler colonialism: Sam McKegney, Carrying the Burden of Peace: Reimagining Indigenous Masculinities Through Story, University of Regina Press, 2021
    • Indigenous sovereignty just down the road: Kiara Vellios, Andréanne Doyon, ‘Examining Indigenous resurgence in urban parks through Vancouver’s Stanley Park’, Journal of Urban Affairs, 2026
    • Occupied labour between the rvier and the sea: Ihab Maharme, ‘The Politics of labour: everyday practices of Palestinian workers in the settler economy’, Journal of Political Power, 2026
    • The occupied water between the river and the sea: Elisa Adami, ‘Thinking with Water in Palestine’, UAL Research Online, 01/11/25
    • Come and see settler colonialism: Jennifer Lynn Kelly, Invited to Witness: Solidarity Tourism across Occupied Palestine, Duke University Press, 2023
    • Occupying time AND space: Natalia Gutkowski, Struggling for Time: Environmental Governance and Agrarian Resistance in Israel/Palestine, Stanford University Press, 2024
    • Settler malaria: Amanda Cooke, Megan B. Brickley, ‘Ecologies of Risk: Malaria and Settler Landscape Transformation in 19th-Century Ontario’, American Journal of Human Biology, 38, 1, 2026, #e70181
    • Settler colonialism is a current affair: Zachary Levenson, ‘Review Essay: On Settler Colonialism, Its Critics, and Its Critics’ Critics’, American Journal of Sociology, 2026
    • The race of Indigenous peoples: Sofia Locklear, ‘”People love playing the ‘what are you?’ game with me”: Street Racialization of American Indian and Alaska Native individuals’, Social Problems, 2026
    • On settler colonial Kashmir: Tasleem Malik, Maira Safdar, Fiazullah Jan, ‘Beyond occupation: memory, displacement, and the logic of settler control in Kashmir’, GeoJournal, 91, 2026, #9
    • Reliable allies? Sarah Nelson, ‘The missing map: a meditation on allyship’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • Poetic refusal (of settler colonialism): Jeffrey Sacks, Poeticality: In Refusal of Settler Life, Fordham University Press, 2026
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