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« Teaching against settler colonialism: H. Came, V. Kerrigan, K. Gambrell, T. Simpson, M. Goza, ‘Unravelling colonial education: from Dazzling White to Deliberately Decolonised and supporting the case for Indigenous universities’, Whiteness and Education, 2024
Settlers easily kill for that one thing: Robert M. Owens, Killing over Land: Murder and Diplomacy on the Early American Frontier, University of Oklahoma Press, 2024 »

Marxism and settler colonialism: Lorenzo Veracini, ‘The Long March To This Place?’ Arena Quarterly, 21, 2025

01May25

Excerpt: This article engages with this critique, outlines a protracted tradition of Marxian, Marxist and communist reflection on settler colonialism, notes that analyses of settler colonialism and class are not mutually exclusive, and argues that settler-colonial studies is ‘indigenous’ to Marxism and socialist traditions.

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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

    • Unmissable settler patriarchy: Lindsay Martel Montgomery, Heather Pezzarossi, Jennifer P. Byram, ‘Archiving Futurity Within the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women’s Crisis’, American Anthropologist, 2025
    • Settler Oktoberfest! Audrey Ricke, Oktoberfest in Brazil: Domestic Tourism, Sensescapes, and German Brazilian Identity, University of Alabama Press, 2023
    • Settler patriarchy: Jordan Lea Johnson, ‘Angelina in the Archives: Tracing Heteropatriarchy and Settler Colonialism in Local Histories of the Pineywoods’, Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies, 46, 3, 2025, pp. 121-151
    • Represented, but within settler colonialism: Loredana Giarrusso, ‘Contemporary Colonialism, Governmentality and the Pursuit of a Commonwealth Indigenous Body, 1973–2005’, Journal of Australian Studies, 2025
    • German settlers without settler colonies (with illustrations): Rachel O’Sullivan, ‘Entangled Narratives of Colonialism: Promoting Overseas and Continental Expansion in Nazi Germany’, Copernico, 2025
    • German settlers since 1880 (with illustrations): Tim Buchen, ‘The portrayal of the (Russian) German colonists as settlement pioneers 1880–1945’, Copernico, 2025
    • German settlers during WWI (with illustrations): Ron Hellfritzsch, ‘On the Road to the ‘New Eastern Lands’: Plans for the German Colonization of the Baltic States during the First World War’, Copernico, 2025
    • Early Palestinian reflections on settler colonialism: John Harfouch, ‘”The being of Israel is the non-being of Palestine”: Understanding Zionism through the Work of Fayez Sayegh’, Liberated Texts, 10/11/25
    • Assimilation in the French colony: Nadia Zerrouk, ‘French assimilation in Algeria: Between its logical aspects and the racism of colonialism’, Art Law and Accounting Reporter, 44, 2, 2025, pp. 201-212
    • Settler medicine and the question of the body: Nina Salouâ Studer, ‘Female Agents of Colonialism: Women Doctors in Algeria at the Turn of the Century’, The Maghreb Review, 50, 4, 2025, pp. 423-438
    • Settler ecofascism: Casey A. Williams, ‘Settler Ecofascism, Fossil Capitalism, and Democratic Crisis’, Environmental Communication, 2025
    • Reflecting on Asian settler colonialisms: Malaya Caligtan-Tran, Marimas Hosan Mostiller, Megumi Chibana, Katherine Achacoso, ‘On the Politics of Indigeneity and Asian Settler Colonialism in Asia: A Roundtable Discussion’, Amerasia Journal, 2025
    • Settler mnemonics: Charles Sepulveda, José Francisco Gutiérrez, Kēhaulani Natsuko Vaughn, ‘Sohcahtoa: settler mnemonics and the state of exception’, AlterNative, 2025
    • Indigenous and raced: Nitasha Tamar Sharma, ‘Race and Indigeneity in Pacific Islands and Settler Colonial Studies’, Critical Ethnic Studies, 7, 2, 2021
    • Conquering the future: Saifun Nahar, Muztaba Rafid, Mohammad Mozammel Haque, ‘Decolonising Futures: Afrofuturism and Indigenous Futurisms in Contemporary Latin American and Caribbean Literature’, IJELSS, 10, 6, 2025
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