settler colonial studies blog
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« Settlers going postal: Miranda Leibel, Justin Leifso, ‘”The heart that pumps the blood through the veins and arteries of our national life”: Canadian postal services as settler-colonial infrastructure’, Political Geography, 109, 2024, #103063
Brazil and settler society: Desirée Poets, Unsettling Brazil: Urban Indigenous and Black Peoples’ Resistances to Dependent Settler Capitalism, University of Alabama Press, 2024 »

Settler colonial elimination and reproduction: Jodi A. Byrd, Joseph M. Pierce, ‘Settler-Colonial Elimination and the Dobbs Decision: Relationality, Indigenous Kin-making, and Queer Responsibilities’, GLQ, 30, 1, 2024, pp. 81-102

28Jan24

Abstract: Jodi A. Byrd and Joseph M. Pierce discuss the Supreme Court decisions Dobbs v. Jackson and Haaland v. Brackeen, which upheld the legality of the 1978 Indian Child Welfare Act. In this wide-ranging conversation, the authors reflect on “what Indigenous studies and queer studies can bring together,” considering Indigenous dispossession, kinship, settler colonialism, sovereignty, and reciprocity, among many other subjects.

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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.
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    • Prosthetic settler colonialism: Caroline Lieffers, ‘Disability, Spirituality, and Settler Colonialism: The Story of Joseph La Flesche’s Artificial Leg’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 99, 3, 2025, pp. 457-487
    • Leveraging the settler ecostory: Caitlin Morton, Settler Colonialism and the Australian Environment: A Sociolegal Discourse Analysis of Decolonising Narratives Mobilised by First Nations Peoples in Modern Australian Environmental Conflicts, PhD dissertation, University of Sydney, 2025
    • The death of settler colonialism: Rye Purvis, ‘A conceptual review of a land-informed Native American Death Pedagogy: Overcoming settler colonialism and the Western Death System’, Death Studies, 2025
    • Once they were migrants (then they were settlers): Fotios Papadopoulos, From migrants to settlers: the history of Greek communities in colonial Zimbabwe and Tanganyika, 1890s-1960, PhD dissertation, EUI, 2025
    • Not necessarily vulnerable: Jade Jenkinson, ‘Contemporary Crises, Historical Antecedents: Refusing Vulnerability in Indigenous Speculative Fictions’, Comparative American Studies An International Journal, 2025
    • Growing settlers thinking about settler colonialism: Robert Petrone, ‘”I’m from the federal government and I’m here to help”: An examination of how Firekeeper’s Daughter educates about settler colonialism’, Bank Street Occasional Paper Series, 54, 2025, pp. 73-85
    • Settlers out of time and out of place: Linda Andersson Burnett, ‘The “Savage” Within: The Sámi People and the Archaeology of Whiteness’, Isis, 116, 4, 2025, pp. 766-777
    • Settler dishumanitarianism: Ron J. Smith, ‘A failure of humanitarianism: the West, Settler Colonialism, and the Manufactured crisis in Gaza’, Third World Quarterly, 2025
    • The roots of settler colonial architecture: Andrew Herscher, ‘Anishinaabe Forests, American Lumber, Settler Balloon Frames’, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 84, 4, 2025, pp. 512-526
    • Settler colonial planning: Alberto Toscano, ‘Planning Against Palestine’,Protean Magazine, 13/10/25
    • German settlers in the Far East: Vladimir N. Shaidurov, ‘The German Population of Siberia amid Social Transformations, 1900s–1920s’, Journal of Frontier Studies, 4, 2025
    • That burning feeling: Rachel Fetherston, ‘Bushfire, Drought and Settler-Colonial Culpability in the Eco-crime Novel’, in Rachel Fetherston, Theorising the Postcolonial Eco-Novel, Palgrave Macmillan, 2025, pp. 155-189
    • Settler colonialism does not produce ‘good institutions’: Kate Meagher, ‘Thandika Mkandawire and the Decolonization of Settler Colonial Thinking’, International Development, 21/10/25
    • The language of settlers: Daniel Duncan, ‘Placing the Needs Washed Construction in a Broader Settler Colonial Context’, University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics, 31, 2, 2025, pp. 70-79
    • Settler colonialism is depressing: D. C. Wendt, M. Garneau, H. Fraser-Purdy, N. Augustine, C. Gilpin, S. H. Stewart, C. J. Mushquash, J. A. Burack, ‘Depression and Indigenous peoples in the United States and Canada: Prevalence, risk/protective factors, interventions’, in T. M. Olino, J. W. Pettit, R. C. Boyd, B. C. Chu, E. P. Hayden, D. A. Pizzagalli (eds), APA handbook of depression: Minoritized populations, lifespan development, assessment, and treatment, American Psychological Association, 2026, pp. 57-76
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