settler colonial studies blog
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« Performance against perfunctory: Sheetala Bhat, ‘Indigenous performances of love beyond settler recognition in Vigil and the unnatural and accidental women’, Australasian Drama Studies, 2024
Settler stories now: Daniel Scholte, Settler News Media Understandings of Wet’suwet’en sovereignty and the Coastal GasLink Pipeline: Discourses of Territorial Sovereignty, Legality, and Justice, MA dissertation, Carleton University, 2024 »

With a chapter by James Miller and Natalie J. K. Baloy on ‘Settler Colonial Critique and Indigenous Urbanisation’: Kundani Makakavhule, Karina Landman (eds), Decolonising the Built Environment Process, Product, and Pedagogy, Routledge, 2025

24Dec24

Access the chapter here.

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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 settler’s arrested development: Shuya Su, ‘Indigenous Girlhood, Radical Resurgence, and the Question of Settler Growth in Jen Ferguson’s The Summer of Bitter and Sweet’, Children’s Literature in Education, 2026
    • Digital dispossession: Tyler McCreary, David Hugill, ‘Digital Colonialism, Fossil Capitalism, and Indigenous Dispossession’, Capitalism Nature Socialism, 2026
    • The colony as a prison: L. N. Billington, ‘L.N. (2026). ‘Incarceration as Colonisation: Indigenous Imprisonment and Self-Determination in Australia and Kanaky’, in T. Anthony, M. Bhatia, K. Pillay, J. M. Williams (eds), The Palgrave Handbook of Racial Injustice and Resistance, Palgrave Macmillan, 2026, pp. 245-270
    • Words matters (colonialist entomologists): Janice Vis, ‘Whose Colony? Rethinking Terminology and Insect Relations’, Environmental Humanities, 18, 1, 2026, pp. 78-95
    • Sabotage as counterinfrastructure: Kyle R. Matthews, Joanna Kidman, Sophie Bond, Karen Nairn, ‘How does settler-colonialism problematise the concepts of infrastructure and sabotage? Insights from debates about the Treaty of Waitangi in Aotearoa’, Human Geography, 2026
    • Africa’s last settler colony? Robert Flahive, ‘Western Sahara as a design project: tracking the architecture of counterrevolution for “Greater Morocco”‘, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • Evacuative settler colonialism: Peter Adey, ‘Settler-colonial-evacuative infrastructures of mobility’, Geographical Reserach, 64, 2, 2026, e70057
    • Settler colonialism in Bangladesh: Anwar Hossain, ‘The Position of Bengali Settlers in Development Dynamics: The Case of the Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh’, Asia Social Issues, 19, 3, 2026, #285525
    • Heightened risk: Gabriel L. Schwartz, Theresa Rocha Beardall, Jaquelyn L. Jahn, ‘Heightened risk of fatal police violence in and around reservations for American Indian/Alaska Native peoples in the United States’, PNAS, 123, 11, 2026, #e2521002123
    • Settler colonialism in Morocco: Ahmed Bendella, Ugo d’Ambrosio, Emily Caruso, Gary Martin, Soufiane M’Sou et al, ‘Rights to Land among Amazigh Peoples in Morocco’, in William Nikolakis (ed.), Land Rights Now: Global Voices on Indigenous Peoples and Land Justice, Cambridge University Press, 2025, pp. 229-248
    • Weird settler colonialism: Isabelle Hesse, ‘Speculative Histories and the More-Than-Human: Weirding Colonialism and Climate Change in Contemporary Australian Fiction’, The Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry, 2026
    • The law of the settler: Brenna Bhandar, ‘The Antinomies of Settler Colonialism and International Law: Between Juridifiction and Juridicide’, The Palestine Yearbook of International Law Online, 2026
    • Consumption: Yale D. Belanger, Alli Moncrieff, ‘Disrupting the small Alberta settler city: supervised consumption and the limits of belonging’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • Slow erasure: Bram De Smet, ‘Slow Erasure: Identity, Agency & Episteme in Settler-Colonial Genocide by Attrition’, TAPRI Studies in Peace and Conflict Research, 113, 2026
    • Being in the world in the colonies: Rohan Price, Being in the Colonies: Singapore Western Australia Tasmania, Peter Lang, 2026
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