Archive for September, 2025

Abstract: In her response to my article, “Authenticity and Decolonization: On the Subversive Authenticity of Indigenous Resurgence,” Jordan Mullard invites me to regard subversive authenticity as a way of reckoning with the trauma of settler colonialism through a process of “becoming.” Conversely, Kurzwelly doubts the political and analytical efficacy of the concept, offering an anti-realist […]


Description: In 2007, the Department of Homeland Security began condemnation proceedings on the property of Dr. Eloisa Tamez, a Lipan Apache (Ndé) professor, veteran, and title holder to land in South Texas deeded to her ancestors under the colonial occupation and rule of King Charles III of Spain in 1761, during a time when Indigenous […]


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 …


Abstract: In Australian public institutions, Aboriginal women’s visibility is often mobilised as an instrument of containment rather than a marker of structural change. Focusing on the Victorian Public Sector, this article examines how equity regimes incorporate Indigenous presence while preserving settler-colonial authority. Drawing on Make Us Count and interviews with 25 Aboriginal women, we show […]


Excerpt: In recent years, scholarship on urban Indigenous history has embraced the interdisciplinary intersection of history and Indigenous studies, generating exciting new trends in the field. Early scholarship set a strong foundation but largely examined the contexts of United States postWorld War II era policy and Indigenous activism as represented by the Red Power movement. […]


Abstract: Retirement income systems, such as superannuation, are meant to be non-discriminatory and consider disadvantage faced by members of society. There are significant differences between the life expectancies of Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. The gap in life expectancies is not considered when determining when Indigenous peoples can retire. In this paper, we revisit what has […]


Description: This volume provides a historical context for the present escalation of hostilities between Palestinians and the State of Israel. It brings together interdisciplinary chapters written by international specialists in the field of interreligious engagement. It presents Jewish and Palestinian perspectives as well as the South African perspective regarding apartheid, international law, antisemitism, and the […]


* An Italianism: meaning the reinvention of the wheel Abstract: This chapter demonstrates that the CW-Condition shaped the dominant form of colonialism, namely “extraction colonialism” under a weak CW-Condition and “settlement colonialism” under a strong CW-Condition. A key conclusion is that the causal arrow in the association between the CW-Condition and colonialism runs from the […]


Abstract: In the late nineteenth century, following the conclusion of the New Zealand Wars of the 1860s, settler society in Aotearoa undertook a political economic project aimed at intensifying and consolidating the local settler colonial project. In doing so, the 1870s were marked by metabolic explosion: the systematic, temporally compressed, and politically driven transformation of […]


Description: The Young Max Weber and German Social Democracy examines the formative years of a classic social thinker once called the ‘bourgeois Marx’ from the standpoint of his relationship to the foremost working-class organization of his time. It argues that Weber’s early engagement with the standpoint of the rural worker — not his later study of […]