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« Off white? Fully settler: Uzma Jamil, ‘Off-White: The tensions of Whiteness in Quebec’, Identities, 2025
The city of settler colonialism: Rebecca Kiddle, ‘Beyond inclusion: reckoning with settler colonial cities’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026 »

Settler colonial epistempophilia: Alexis Shotwell, ‘Learning How To Not Steal: Settler Practices for Being in Relation to Indigenous Sovereignties in Entangled Worlds’, Theory & Event, 29, 1, 2026, pp. 140-157

09Feb26

Abstract: “Epistemophilia”—a love of knowledge—is key feature of colonialism. It includes the belief that knowing more is better, that knowledge should be shared, and that knowledge is separable from context. Settler-colonial education systems are in part systems of epistemic extraction and theft that buttress material and relational extractivism, attempting to steal land, relations, and practices. In this paper I explore how white settlers doing research, learning, and teaching can resist extractivism in our work, including creating space to not know, to recognize situated and embodied forms of knowledge that are not transferable across context, and to respect boundaries.

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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

    • Can the Indigenous person speak? Stephen Gray, ‘Petitioners, Protestors or Protectors? A Short History of Indigenous People and Protest’, in Azadeh Dastyari, Maria O’Sullivan (eds), International Law and the Regulation of Protest, Routledge, 2026
    • The city of settler colonialism: Rebecca Kiddle, ‘Beyond inclusion: reckoning with settler colonial cities’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2026
    • Settler colonial epistempophilia: Alexis Shotwell, ‘Learning How To Not Steal: Settler Practices for Being in Relation to Indigenous Sovereignties in Entangled Worlds’, Theory & Event, 29, 1, 2026, pp. 140-157
    • Off white? Fully settler: Uzma Jamil, ‘Off-White: The tensions of Whiteness in Quebec’, Identities, 2025
    • Municipal settler colonialism: Margaret Ellis-Young, Municipal Interpretations of Indigenous-Settler Reconciliation in Planning for Urban Redevelopment and Regeneration, PhD dissertation, University of Waterloo, 2025
    • Thrivance as the end of settler colonialism: Ashik Istiak, Fairooz Saiyara, ‘From survivance to thrivance: the becoming of a defiant Indian self in Zitkála-Šá’s American Indian Stories’, Cogent Arts & Humanities, 13, 1, 2026, #2623567
    • The settler colonial sovereignty of policing: Brieanna Watters, Policing Sovereignty: Tribal-State Policing Agreements and Settler Colonial Governance, PhD dissertation, University of Minnesota, 2025
    • Humanitarian settlers are absolutely settlers: Darren Reid, ‘Indigenous Rights, Philanthropy and Humanitarian Governance across the Anglo World, 1837–1951’, The Historical Journal, 2026
    • The great settler unpollination: Gabriella R. Altmire, Richard York, ‘The Anthophilic rift: advancing a sociology of biodiversity loss through the pollination crisis’, Environmental Sociology, 2026
    • The well being of a settler society: Krista Maxwell, Indigenous Healing as Paradox: Re-Membering and Biopolitics in the Settler Colony, University of Alberta Press, 2025
    • A regional settler identity: Andrew Watson, Making Muskoka: Tourism, Rural Identity, and Sustainability, 1870–1920, UBC Press, 2023
    • Positionality against settler colonialism: Dan Frederick Orcherton, ‘From Dust We Came and from Dust We Shall Return: Settler Scholar Positionality, Equity and Collaborative Commitment in Higher Education Reform’, Journal of Policy & Governance, 5, 2, 2025, pp. 21, 56
    • Relationality against settler colonialism: Melissa Kennedy, Erin O’Donnell (eds), People, Place and Nature in Indigenous-Settler Relations: Recentring the More-than-Human World, Springer, 2026
    • Settler colonialism in French: Caterina Bandini, Marion Lecoquierre (eds), Le colonialisme de peuplement: applications empiriques et approches critiques, Special Issue of Revue internationale de politique comparée, 2, 31, 2024
    • Canoeing through settler colonialism: Brandon Pludwinski, ‘Postcolonial im/mobilities Youth summer camp canoe travel in Algonquin Provincial Park’, in Dominic Lapointe, Michela Stinson, Meghan Muldoon, Bryan Grimwood (eds), Justice, Power, and Mobility in Tourism, Routledge, 2026
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