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« The insured settler: Onyx Sloan Morgan, ‘Tracing the settler colonial legacies of insurance: From empire to wildfires in British Columbia, Canada’, Geoforum, 170, 2026, #104544
Anti-Zionist land based Judaism? Stephanie Gray, ‘Ecological Entanglements: Imagining a Land-Based Judaism’, in Clayton Crockett, Saswat Samay Das, Ananya Roy Pratihar (eds), Religion, Politics and the New Materialism: Philosophical Perspectives, Palgrave, 2026, pp, 113-131 »

Science fiction thinks settler colonialism: Jasmine H. Wade, ‘Antiblackness and Settler Colonialism in N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Trilogy’, Foundation, 151, 2025

02Feb26

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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

    • Settler colonialism in Kashmir: Goldie Osuri, Settler/colonialism in Kashmir: Sovereignty, Catastrophe, Indigeneity, Manchester University Press, 2026
    • Criminal nonplaces: Šárka Bubíková, ‘Nonplaces and Crime in David Heska Wanbli Weiden’s Winter Counts’, in Petr Chalupský, Tereza Topolovská (eds), Spatiality in Contemporary Anglophone Literatures, Routledge, 2026
    • Settlers and their good press: Helena Goodwyn, Reviewing The New Journalism, the New Imperialism and the Fiction of Empire, 1870–1900 by Andrew Griffiths, Settlers, War, and Empire in the Press: Unsettling News in Australia and Britain, 1863–1902 by Sam Hutchinson, and Dreamworlds of Race: Empire and the Utopian Destiny of Anglo-America by Duncan Bell, Modern Language Review, 121, 2026, pp. 260-267
    • Reconciliations with barriers: Kaylee Grace Brink, State-Driven Indigenous-Settler Reconciliation in Australia and Canada: The Identification of Societal and Individual-Level Barriers, PhD dissertation, Victoria University of Wellington, 2026
    • Settler what-aboutism: Jayde Fuller, ‘”What-aboutism” as colonial technology: a practical guide for First Nations People – how deflection operates as an automated defence system and how to respond from sovereignty’, Indigenous Regulatory Practice, 11/03/26
    • Trafficking settlers: Hannah Greenwald, ‘Trafficked into Oblivion: Indigenous Women and the Politics of Maternalism in Nineteenth-Century Buenos Aires, Argentina’, The American Historical Review, 131, 1, 2026, pp. 26-60
    • Settler nuclear: Jessica Urwin, Contaminated Country: Nuclear Colonialism and Aboriginal Resistance in Australia, University of Washington Press, 2025
    • Contesting settler control over Indigenous bodies (introducing a special issue): Ashlea Gillon, Bronwyn Carlson, ‘Indigenous(ly) fat, fat(ly) Indigenous’, Fat Studies, 2026
    • Selective humanitarianism: Pietro Stefanini, Settler Colonial Humanitarianism: A Genealogy of the Settler Subject in Palestine/Israel, PhD dissertation, University of Edinburgh, 2024
    • Shocking settlers (in Kenya): Colin Leys, Norman Leys and Settler Colonialism in Kenya, Merlin Press, 2025
    • Resettlers are settlers: Cristian Cercel, ‘The emigration solution and the coloniality of migration: postwar plans of resettling German expellees’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • The problem of the settler library out there: Dattatraya Kalbande, ‘Toward extraterrestrial librarianship: Designing knowledge systems for human settlements in space’, Journal of Space Safety Engineering, 2026
    • Indigenous-settler relations in urban Nigeria: Olutoyin Samuel Senbor, ‘Ethics, Culture, and Peaceful Co-Existence among Indigenous and Settler Communities in Ketu, Lagos State’, Interculturality, 1, 2, 2026
    • Assimilate or die! Gracelen Hawkins, ‘Comparing Assimilationist and Non-Assimilationist Approaches in Settler Colonialism: From Ancient Times to the Present’, Honors dissertation, Wright State University, 2025
    • They wear settler ignorance: Kai Handfield, Thomas Delawarde-Saïas, ‘Indigenous facilitators raising awareness about colonialism within settler colonies: tensions and ambivalence’, AlterNative, 2026
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