settler colonial studies blog
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« Food settler colonialism: Heather Elliott, ‘Unsettling Narratives: Settler Colonization in Food Movements on Turtle Island’, Sessions Sociologiques, 10, 1, 2020, pp. 51-62
Settlers rejecting settlers: Andonis Piperoglou, ‘Envisioning Greek Refugees as ‘Farmers for Australia’: Christy Freeleagus, Land Settlement and Immigration Restriction in White Australia’, Australian Historical Studies, 52, 1, 2021, pp. 106-122 »

The settler curriculum: Matilda Keynes, Beth Marsden, ‘Ontology, sovereignty, legitimacy: two key moments when history curriculum was challenged in public discourse and the curricular effects, Australia 1950s and 2000s’, History of Education Review, 2021

12Feb21

Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to examine the ways that history curriculum has worked to legitimise dispossession through narratives that elide questions of Indigenous sovereignty, and which construct and consolidate white settler identity and possession.

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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 Arctic imperialist scramble and the Indigenous people who live there: Carin Holroyd, Ken Coates (eds), The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics, Second Edition, Palgrave, 2025
    • Humans and animals in the settler frontiers: Eeva Kuikka, Human-Animal Relations in the Indigenous Literatures of the Soviet North, Palgrave, 2026
    • Liberia as a settler polity: Franka Vaughan, Settler Colonialism in Liberia: Disavowal of the Marginalised and Contemporary Citizenship Debates in Post-War Liberia, Springer, 2026
    • Settlers having fun: Judy Davidson, Matt Ormandy, ‘Stolen land for private clubs: leisure, land use, and climate coloniality along the kisiskâciwani-sîpiy’, Leisure Studies, 2025
    • It’s a British thing: Susan Kingsley Kent , British Settler Colonialism since 1530: Indigenous Peoples in an Imperial World, Bloomsbury, 2025
    • Latter Day settlers: Melvin C. Johnson, ‘West of the Missouri: Latter Day Saints Among the Civilized Tribes of the Indian Territory before 1861’, The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal, 44, 2, 2024, pp. 42-68
    • The memory of settlers: Chad L. Anderson, The Storied Landscape of Iroquoia: History, Conquest, and Memory in the Native Northeast, University of Nebraska Press, 2020
    • 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
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