Excerpt: Decolonizing Palestine offers a deep dive into the everyday politics and governance of the Gaza Strip in particular, and the operation of settler colonialism more generally. Sen’s ethnography brings to light everyday frustrations, contradictions, and resiliencies in Gaza while offering important methodological considerations and reflections about conducting work of this nature as a non-Palestinian, anti/post colonial researcher. I leave analysis and consideration of Sen’s work on Gaza and Hamas to people better qualified and attuned to the local context than I am, and instead focus on the theoretical implications the book poses for the territoriality of settler-colonialism at a time when the “method” of settler-colonization is growing in popularity and usage in post-colonial places. In this way, I am engaging Sen’s work as an anti/post colonial fellow traveller who researches colonial state formation in both postcolonial South Asia (specifically Sri Lanka and India) and settler-colonial Canada. Consequently I also grapple with some of the same challenges of originating from post and settler colonial territory in Trinidad while working from Canada.