Excerpt: The lives and struggles of political prisoners such as Chippewa Leonard Peltier and Palestinian-Arab Walid Duqqa accentuate the contradictions of how the very sovereignty and governance of settler-colonial nations rely on killability and carcerality as a state logic. Imprisoned by American and Israeli settler legal systems for expressed political resistance against their respective colonial regimes, the inhumane detention, medical malfeasance, legal improprieties, and basic violation of human rights of these two liberation militants illustrate important legal lessons that Natsu Saito and Noura Erakat teach us. If the imprisonment of Gaza itself since 2007 and the Apartheid system that divide Jerusalem and the West Bank into an archipelago of encircled enclaves shows us anything, it teaches us that carcerality and erasability (embedded in the logic of elimination) in the settler state extends beyond the prison system, to include other racialized and gendered systems of carcerality/erasure, as Nadim Rouhana, Joy James, Sherene Razack, Noura Erakat, Sunera Thoubani, Sarah Ihmoud and Otman and Shalhoub-Kevorkian’s contributions to this special issue indicate.