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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

    • Internal and settler colonialisms: Upasana Bibha, Agustin Laó-Montes, ‘The Multiple Lives of Internal Colonialism’, Sociological Forum, 2026
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    • The settler’s hill: Maya Charlton, “On This Very Hill”: Narratives of Conquest in Willa Cather’s A Lost Lady, PhD dissertation, Leigh University, 2026
    • Even self-colonisation requires an Indigenous other! Kosuke Shimizu, ‘Eurocentrism and the construction of the ‘self’ in colonialism: The Okinawa–Japan relationality’, Political Studies Review, 2026
    • The settler colonial limit of acceptability: Mark Mallory, ‘The Names of Four Scouts: Slavery, Settler Colonialism, and the Limits of Incorporation at the Texas Capitol Complex since 1983’, Journal of Texas History, 2, 1, 2026, #4
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    • Gendered settler colonialism: Lihi Ben Shitrit, Idan Chazan, ‘Demographic Anxieties of Jewish Sovereignty: Palestinian Women’s Bodies in Israeli Annexation Politics’, Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society, 2026
    • Poetic fragmentation against settler mythscapes: Doro Wiese, ‘Unsettling Coloniality: Opaque White Space in the Cut-Up Poetry of Jordan Abel’s (Nisga’a) Un/Inhabited’, English Studies, 2026
    • Settler penetration and appropriation are gendered: Christie Harner, ‘Louisa Anne Meredith, Ethel Pedley, and Gendered Ecological Knowledge of the Australian Bush’, Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies, 22, 1, 2026
    • Ruthless settler colonialism: Rebecca Lindsay, Reading Ruth in Settler Colonial Australia, Society of Biblical Literature, 2026
    • Crimea as a settler colony: Mariia Shynkarenko, Identity as Weapon: Crimean Tatars and their Quest for Indigenous Self-determination, University of Toronto Press, 2026
    • Settlers Magdalenism (i.e., rescuing ‘fallen’ women for the purpose of settlement): Marine Berthiot ‘Decolonising the Character of the Magdalene in White Settler Colonies’, Journal of Intercultural Studies, 2026
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    • Settlers on the move: Jillian Louise Hahnlen Conroy, The Ober Homestead Site: A Study Investigating the Research Potential of Nineteenth Century Sites Located along the Wagon Roads of Southern California, PhD dissertation, University of Maryland, 2026
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