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« Sovereign displays: Debbie Bargallie, Bronwyn Carlson, ‘Performing Equity, Preserving Power: The Double Bind for Aboriginal Australian Women in Public Sector Workplaces’, Journal of Sociology, 2025
That settler colonial wall sits on Indigenous land: Margo Tamez, Cynthia Bejarano, Jeffrey P. Shepherd (eds), Gathering Together, We Decide: Archives of Dispossession, Resistance, and Memory in Ndé Homelands, University of Arizona Press, 2025 »

Settler colonial medicine: Obinna Esomchukwu, Lisa Bishop, Libby Dean, Kori A. La Donna, Sarah Burm, ‘Facing hard truths: Medical education’s reckoning with settler colonialism in an era of reconciliation’, Medical Education, 2025

13Sep25

Excerpt: Medical schools are responsible for embedding Indigenous health education across the training continuum. Central to this work is recognising settler colonialism as an ongoing structure …

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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

    • Poetic refusal (of settler colonialism): Jeffrey Sacks, Poeticality: In Refusal of Settler Life, Fordham University Press, 2026
    • Climate change resettlement and settler colonialism: Fatina Abreek-Zubiedat, Irit Katz, ‘Climate change resettlement and inhabitation: Spatialising cultures of colonial pasts and alternative futures in the global south’, Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space, 2026
    • Hummusphobic gastrocolonialism: Dafna Hirsch, The Israeli Career of Hummus: Colonial Appropriation, Authenticity, and Distinction, Indian University Press, 2026
    • Physical education: Shrehan Lynch, Lisa Hunter, Carla Luguetti, Jay Laurendeau, Chen Chen, ‘Decanonise the “forefather”: Situating Muska Mosston’s Contributions to Physical Education and Sport Pedagogy within the Context of Zionist Settler Colonization of Palestine’, Journal of Emerging Sport Studies, 13, 2026
    • Something fishy in the settler law: Roslynn Ang, ‘Refusing settler sovereignty: salmon fishing for Ainu rituals’, International Journal of Heritage Studies, 2026
    • Transnational Christian settler colonialism from a settler colony: Thandi Gamedze, Sarojini Nadar, ‘Sanctifying settler colonialism: An intersectional discursive analysis of a South-African Christian Zionist media statement’, Journal for the Study of Religion, 38, 2, 2025.
    • Affect and settlers: Kate Nash, Caitlin Mollica, Kate Senior, ‘Talking About the Voice: Everyday Political Talk About Indigenous Constitutional Recognition’, International Journal of Communication, 20, 2026, pp. 48-66
    • Settler colonialism in Africa: Asafa Jalata, ‘The Political Economy of Land in Oromia and Ethiopia’, The Journal of Oromo Studies, 30 1, 2026, pp. 1-31
    • The Arctic imperialist scramble and the Indigenous people who live there: Carin Holroyd, Ken Coates (eds), The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy and Politics, Second Edition, Palgrave, 2025
    • Humans and animals in the settler frontiers: Eeva Kuikka, Human-Animal Relations in the Indigenous Literatures of the Soviet North, Palgrave, 2026
    • Liberia as a settler polity: Franka Vaughan, Settler Colonialism in Liberia: Disavowal of the Marginalised and Contemporary Citizenship Debates in Post-War Liberia, Springer, 2026
    • Settlers having fun: Judy Davidson, Matt Ormandy, ‘Stolen land for private clubs: leisure, land use, and climate coloniality along the kisiskâciwani-sîpiy’, Leisure Studies, 2025
    • It’s a British thing: Susan Kingsley Kent , British Settler Colonialism since 1530: Indigenous Peoples in an Imperial World, Bloomsbury, 2025
    • Latter Day settlers: Melvin C. Johnson, ‘West of the Missouri: Latter Day Saints Among the Civilized Tribes of the Indian Territory before 1861’, The John Whitmer Historical Association Journal, 44, 2, 2024, pp. 42-68
    • The memory of settlers: Chad L. Anderson, The Storied Landscape of Iroquoia: History, Conquest, and Memory in the Native Northeast, University of Nebraska Press, 2020
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