Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Abstract: American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities continue to experience health disparities and poor health outcomes, which are influenced by social determinants of health. The theory of settler colonialism provides a framework for understanding the structures that affect social determinants of health and the resulting health disparities. Western biomedicine and medical education have been implicated in […]


Abstract: The Department of Indian Affairs and church counterparts who administered Canada’s Indian Residential School System promoted Euro-Canadian physical activities to reform and replace traditional Indigenous physical culture practices like the Sundance and the potlatch. Administrators used Western forms of movement to compel obedience to Euro-Canadian culture, including spirituality. An observer wrote that the students […]


Abstract: This article examines the relationship between reparations as compensation and reparations as transformation in settler colonial Australia. Much of the global reparations debate on colonization and slavery has focused on important demands confronting the historic damages and ongoing accumulation of disadvantage from colonization in ex-colonies or from plantation slavery. Much less has been said […]


Abstract: We conduct a synthetic archaeological and ethnohistoric dating program to assess the timing and tempo of the spread of peaches, the first Eurasian domesticate to be adopted across Indigenous eastern North America, into the interior American Southeast by Indigenous communities who quickly “Indigenized” the fruit. In doing so, we present what may be the […]


Excerpt: Take those farmers. On the one hand, “the exception to the rule of early American history as virtually a theory-free subdiscipline is the recent, intense, and growing interest in the Antipodean export of the idea of settler colonialism as an overarching methodology” (13). On the other hand, evidently early American historians no longer write […]


Abstract: “Asian settler colonialism” calls attention to the simultaneous denial of Kanaka ‘Ōiwi dispossession and the celebration of descendants of Asian immigrants as industrious members of Hawai’i’s multicultural middle class. While we acknowledge the importance of confronting settler colonialism, we argue that Asian settler colonialism reinscribes an inaccurate understanding of Hawai’i Asians today and over […]


Abstract: How is Indigenous-settler solidarity to protect interconnected social ecologies urgent yet altogether precarious? The essay stews on this question in the context of Hawai’i and, through immanent critique of theories about settler aloha ‘āina, demonstrates that becoming hoa provides a necessary alternative practice and dialectic process of binding relations together to aloha ‘āina. First, […]


Abstract: In the early twentieth century, the US federal government created homesteading programs to “Americanize” Hawai’i by encouraging the mass settlement of white families “of good character” to Hawai’i, but to little avail. This essay analyzes a 1912 hearing about the failure of white homesteading in the Territory of Hawai’i, focusing on discourses of race […]


Abstract: Celebrating Indigenous zones and movements of revival and “resurgence” has become a dominant frame of sorts for Indigenous political theory. Emergent Indigenous political praxis in Hawai’i, led by certain grassroots groups and organizers, leads me to theorize a qualitatively and quantitatively different modality of Indigenous politics—what I offer as “insurgent Indigeneity.” This essay traces […]


Description: True West explores myths of the West and how, if left unexamined, they distort the realities of the present and exacerbate polarizations. These misperceptions about land, politics, liberty, and self-determination threaten the wellbeing of western communities overrun by newcomers seeking a dream—and the country, unless America recognizes the dangers of building a national identity […]