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« Settler colonialism’s moving image: María Guadalupe Arenillas, ‘North-South Filmmaking, Settler Colonialism, and Indigenous Resurgences’, JCMS: Journal of Cinema and Media Studies, 65, 2, 2025, pp. 150-156
West of the Western (and a bit south too, and still bloody settler colonial): Brian McFarlane, Outback: Westerns in Australian Cinema, Intellect, 2026 »

With a chapter by Zahi Zalloua: ‘Critique of Indigenous Reason: The Case of Palestine’, in P. Khalil Saucier (ed.), Practices of Disciplinary Refusal for New Futures: On Critique and Humanism, Bloomsbury, 2026

18Feb26

Access the chapter here.

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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

    • The good press of settlers: Shelisa Klassen, Imprinting Empire: Land and Settler Colonialism in Manitoba Newspapers, University of Manitoba Press, 2026
    • A new take on settler colonialism: Charles Menzies, ‘Settler colonialism’, Dialectical Anthropology, 2026
    • The settler army does not need Indigenous peoples: Daniel Stridh, Peter Johansson, ‘Conscription and Colonialism: Tracing the Origins of the Sámi Exemption in the 1885 Swedish Conscription Act’, Scandinavian Journal of History, 2026
    • The heritage of reconciliation? Andrea M. Cuéllar, Ross Kilgour, Perry Stein, ‘Reconciliation and heritage policy making in a Canadian settler-colonial city’, International Journal of Cultural Policy, 2026
    • The settler police: C. Cheung, A. T. Murry, T. Latta et al, ‘Discourse on Indigenous-police interactions’, Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 2026
    • The international law of settler colonialism: Mohsen al Attar, Claire Smith, ‘Settler Colonialism, Race, and International Law’, in Mohsen al Attar, Claire Smith (eds), Emancipating International Law: Confronting the Violence of Racialized Boundaries, Oxford University Press, 2026
    • Settler colonial ecocide: Marine Berthiot, ‘Representing Ecocides in Settler Colonial Arts and Literatures in a (Post-)Terra Nullius Era: An Introduction’, Textures, 30, 2026
    • Accounting, recounting settler colonialism: Rania Kamla, ‘The scream and accounting scholarship: the genocide in Palestine’, Critical Perspectives on Accounting, 103, 2026, #102858
    • Pleading settlers: Darren Reid, ‘Letters to the Editor as Performative Imperial Citizenship: Settler Letters to British Newspapers in the late Nineteenth Century’, Britain and the World, 19, 1, 2026
    • Teaching as a right relation: Aimee de Ney, Remembering Right Relations: A Land-Centered Framework for Settler Teacher Transformation, PhD dissertation, Antioch University, 2026
    • The waters of settler colonialism: Alana Sayers, Revitalizing Hupač̓asatḥ navigational knowledge: Mapping the waters of settler-colonialism using a critical, coastal, community-based consciousness, PhD dissertation, University of Victoria, 2026
    • Settler colonialism as a warning: Mason McCarthy, ‘Deforestation as a Consequence of Viking Settlement: A Case Study of Iceland’, JUST, 10, 2026
    • The ‘choice’ of settlers: Gavin Meyer Furrey, ‘Native Voice, Settler Choice: Oceti Sakowin Charter Schools and the Contradictions of South Dakota School Choice Policies’, Ethnic Studies Review, 49, 1, 2026, pp. 90-109
    • The selective memory of settlers: Angel M. Hinzo, ‘Not Your “Queen”, Not Your “Sq**w”: Reclaiming Ho-Chunk Histories of Hąpoguwįga and Challenging Settler Memory’, Native American and Indigenous Studies, 13, 1, 2026, pp. 100-126
    • It’s the political economy of settler colonialism, s: Phil Henderson, Shiri Pasternak, ‘The Political Economies of Ongoing Settler Colonialism’, Native American and Indigenous Studies, 13, 1, 2026, pp. 266-272
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