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« Ethnogenesis on the settler frontier: Jennifer Adese, Chris Andersen (eds), A People and a Nation: New Directions in Contemporary Métis Studies, UBC Press, 2021
Digital mapping against settler colonialism: Janet Berry Hess (ed.), Digital Mapping and Indigenous America, Routledge, 2021 »

Intimate settler colonialism: Allyson Stevenson, Intimate Integration: A History of the Sixties Scoop and the Colonization of Indigenous Kinship, University of Toronto Press, 2020

18Feb21

Description: Intimate Integration is an important analysis of the “Sixties Scoop” and post-World War II child welfare legislation 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

    • Are the settlers subjected to capitalism (yes, they are)? Wayne Wapeemukwa, ‘Speculative Expropriation’, Political Theory, 2026
    • Israel as the global frontier: Wassim Ghantous, ‘Homological Correspondence: Israel as a Frontier of Global Domination’, Antipode, 2026
    • Settling Europe: Silvia Marton, ‘Imperial dynamics and settler colonialism in East Central Europe. A review essay’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • Settling the postcolonial: Yehezkel (Ezekiel) Lein, ‘Afrikaners in postcolonial Namibia: contiguous settler colonialism and the question of endurance’, National Identities, 2026
    • Anti-Zionist land based Judaism? Stephanie Gray, ‘Ecological Entanglements: Imagining a Land-Based Judaism’, in Clayton Crockett, Saswat Samay Das, Ananya Roy Pratihar (eds), Religion, Politics and the New Materialism: Philosophical Perspectives, Palgrave, 2026, pp, 113-131
    • Science fiction thinks settler colonialism: Jasmine H. Wade, ‘Antiblackness and Settler Colonialism in N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Trilogy’, Foundation, 151, 2025
    • The insured settler: Onyx Sloan Morgan, ‘Tracing the settler colonial legacies of insurance: From empire to wildfires in British Columbia, Canada’, Geoforum, 170, 2026, #104544
    • The Indigeneity of being: Neyooxet Greymorning (ed.), Being IndigenousPerspectives on Activism, Culture, Language, and Identity, Routledge, 2026
    • Really moving education (against settler colonialism): Laura Barraclough, Michaela Wang, ‘Moving Away from Settler Colonialism in the Classroom: Arguments for Mobility in Teacher Education’, Equity & Excellence in Education, 2026
    • Black liberation and settler colonialism: Erik S. McDuffie, The Second Battle for Africa: Garveyism, the US Heartland, and Global Black Freedom, Dike University Press, 2024
    • Racial misclassification under settler colonialism: Anna Kawennison Fetter, Michael Williams, Mindi N. Thompson, ‘Perceived Racial Misclassification Among Native American and Alaska Native College Students: Preliminary Evidence for a Culturally Relevant Stressor’, Race and Social Problems, 18, 2026, #27
    • Stealing mothers: Kathleen S. Kenny et al, ‘The association of child removal by child protective services and mortality among First Nations and non-First Nations mothers in Canada: a retrospective cohort study’, The Lancet Public Health, 20/01/26
    • The pulverisation of Indigenous property: Jessica A. Shoemaker, ‘Fractionation by Design: Remedy Without Repair in Indigenous-Owned Trust Allotments’, Tulsa Law Review, 61, 1, 2025, pp. 63-90
    • The hunger of settler colonialism: Erica Gonzalez, An examination of the impact of settler colonialism on Blackfoot food security and sovereignty: A landscape and policy approach,, MA dissertation, University of Lethbridge, 2025
    • Transitioning: Suzanne Chew, Tracey Galloway, ‘Settler colonialism lock-in: Transitions and the prefiguring of settler futurities’, Energy Research & Social Science, 132, 2026, #104515
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