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Urban settler colonialism in West Papua: Hatib A. Kadir, Bustamin Wahid, ‘Frontier sands: settler colonialism, resource extraction, and indigenous dispossession in Sorong, West Papua’, Settler Colonial Studies, 2025

23May25

Abstract: This article asserts that the development of a West Papuan city’s infrastructure has occurred through an ongoing series of dispossession affecting Indigenous Papuans. These acts of dispossession manifest through various subtle, intimate, and familial channels. Consequently, those engaged in the construction of infrastructure encompass both low-wage settler workers seeking to salvage from a beleaguered capitalist system, and Indigenous Papuans who have suffered land losses. Through ongoing research in Sorong since 2021, we examine the pivotal role of sand quarries by focusing on four aspects. First, land ownership dispossession, specifically the Moi clan in Sorong city, experienced land dispossession. Second, Investigate the material aspects of sand and stone that become the basis for infrastructure establishment. Third, examining how settlers utilize kinship ties among Moi Indigenous Papuans to access land and sand resources. And Fourth depicting the Indigenous Papuans’ efforts to assert claims and control over sand quarries, forming a crucial part of strategies against the encroachment of Indonesian settler communities.


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Sheep devour men (again): Ahlam Soboh, ‘Settler Grazing: A Tool for Ethnic Cleansing in the West Bank’, Policy Commons, 13/03/25

20May25

Abstract: This document outlines how the Israeli occupation army and authorities are using “settler grazing” as a means of ethnic cleansing in the West Bank. By allocating land for grazing to settlers, they aim to displace Palestinian communities, restrict their access to essential resources, and ultimately annex Palestinian land into Israeli settlements. These actions violate international humanitarian law and resolutions affirming the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination. The Jerusalem Legal Aid and Human Rights Center (JLAC) asserts that this policy escalation aims to increase land for the Israeli colonial project while restricting Palestinian livelihoods, leading to direct and indirect displacement.


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Trumpean settler colonialism: Niiyokamigaabaw Deondre Smiles, ‘Settler colonialism in Donald Trump’s America’, The Geographical Journal, 2025

20May25

Abstract: This commentary contends with the broader settler colonial structures through which the second Donald Trump presidency may proceed. Through a historical and contemporaneous engagement with broader concepts such as settler colonialism and the ‘frontier’, this piece grapples with how Indigenous nations can ensure their continued vitality through this political moment.


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The Indigenous forest for the settler tree: Ryan C. Hellenbrand, Into the Woods and Back Again: An Environmental Kin Study of German Settler Ecologies in the Upper Midwest, PhD dissertation, The University of Wisconsin – Madison, 2025

20May25

Abstract: Forests in the United States have long been and continue to be contested places of cultural
identity. Lumbering and European settlement in the forests of Minnesota, Wisconsin and
Michigan radically and violently disrupted Indigenous ecological relationships to their
homelands. Yet the Menominee Nation of Wisconsin has a developed a world-renowned forestry
program that supports their self-determination across multiple domains. This dissertation
examines the genealogy of natural resource conservation in Wisconsin and the Upper Midwest,
specifically the connections between national identity, Indigenous self-determination and the
implementation of forestry. This is a comparative landscape ethnography of German modes of
monumentality: the Endres Chapel at Indian Lake County Park, Wisconsin; the Hermann
Monument in New Ulm, Minnesota; and the implementation of forestry in the cutover region of
the Northwoods. I analyze how histories of place and belonging intersect with forestry in
practice today. The Endres chapel outside of Madison, Wisconsin instantiates familial narratives
of settler belonging to these Indigenous homelands; the Hermann the German statue in New
Ulm, Minnesota as an embodiment of German nationalism in the U.S.; and lastly the
implementation of German Scientific Forestry responds to the ecological devastation of the
Cutover to maintain settlers’ symbolic and material claims to Indigenous homelands
.


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On Gaza and settler colonialism: Lorenzo Veracini, ‘Genocide in Gaza and the End of Settler Colonialism’, The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 2025

19May25

Abstract: Written in April 2025, this position piece is prompted by a number of recent interventions suggesting that the ongoing Gaza genocide is a consequence of Israeli settler colonialism. That the Israeli onslaught in the besieged Palestinian territory is genocidal is undeniable – a mountain of accumulating evidence supports this conclusion. This paper, however, discusses whether ‘settler colonialism’ remains a suitable interpretative tool. It suggests that the unfolding genocide is not a culmination of Zionist settler colonialism but its end.


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Threatening Indigenous peoples: Julisa J. Lopez, Tyler Jimenez, Stephanie A. Fryberg, ‘The cyclical nature of Indigenous identity threat’, European Review of Social Psychology, 2025

19May25

Abstract: Indigenous identity threats are fostered and reified through a cyclical process wherein sources of threat for Indigenous people are simultaneously strategies non-Indigenous people employ to manage threat. One contemporary threat for Indigenous people is the omission of their existence and experiences from the public consciousness. Omission threatens Indigenous identity by undermining well-being and fostering intergroup biases. Indigenous people respond by engaging in collective action to address such pernicious representations. As historical and contemporary wrongdoings impacting Indigenous people become visible, non-Indigenous people are confronted with the reality that their group is responsible for and/or benefits from Indigenous oppression. An unintended consequence of Indigenous collective action is that it may further threaten non-Indigenous people’s identity. To mitigate this threat, non-Indigenous people omit Indigenous people’s existence, which recreates threats for Indigenous people. Interrupting this cycle requires that we actively change the processes embedded in our social institutions and practices that reify Indigenous omission.


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Beware of settlers planting trees: Lucía Gutiérrez Vázquez, Atxu Amann Alcocer, Flavio Martella, ‘Greening the occupation: colonial landscape regulation in Palestine-Israel’ Settler Colonial Studies, 2025

17May25

Abstract: Historically, the modification of the landscape through afforestation has been instrumentalized in the service of the colonization of the territory. In this context, the construction of green areas in Palestine-Israel in the twentieth century can be interpreted as an exercise of strategic territorial control linked to the Zionist project. The planting of forests under the Forest Ordinance of 1926 in the territory acquired by Israel, the cultivation of olives associated with Article 78 of the Ottoman Land Code of 1858 in the West Bank, and the designation of Parks and Nature Reserves thanks to the National Parks Law of 1998 alongside Order 373 in the West Bank are three interventions that demonstrate the synergy between plantations and prevailing regulations. Through its analysis, this article reveals the landscape as a material result of surveillance technologies and argues that green areas in Palestine-Israel are covertly instrumentalized against rootedness, autonomous reproduction, mobility, self-determination, and the memory of the Palestinian people, masking a colonization strategy according to a model of territorial ethnic cleansing.


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More settler colonial necropolitics: Robert L. Nelson, Frontiers of Empire: Max Sering, Inner Colonization, and the German East, 1871-1945, Cambridge University Press, 2025

17May25

Description: How did the homesteads and reservations of the Prairies of Western North America influence German colonization, ethnic cleansing and genocide in Eastern Europe? Max Sering, a world-famous agrarian settlement expert, stood on the Great Plains in 1883 and saw Germany’s future in Eastern Europe: a grand scheme of frontier settlement. Sering was a key figure in the evolution of Germany’s relationship with its eastern frontier, as well as in the overall transformation of the German Right from the Bismarckian 1880s to the Hitlerian 1930s. ‘Inner colonization’ was the settlement of farmers in threatened borderland areas within the nation’s boundaries. Focusing on this phenomenon, Frontiers of Empire complicates the standard thesis of separation between the colonizing country and the colonized space, and blurs the typical boundaries between colonizer and colonized subjects. This title is part of the Flip it Open Programme and may also be available Open Access. Check our website Cambridge Core for details.


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Settler colonial necropolitics: Ian Klinke, Life, Earth, Colony: Friedrich Ratzel’s Necropolitical Geography, University of Michigan Press, 2025

17May25

Description: Life, Earth, Colony explores the ideas, life, and historical significance of German zoologist turned geographer Friedrich Ratzel (1844–1904), famous for developing the foundations of geopolitical thought. Ratzel produced a remarkable body of work that revolutionized the study of space, movement, colonization, and war. He also served as a source of intellectual inspiration for national socialism, particularly through his Lebensraum (living space) concept, which understood all life as being caught in an eternal struggle for space. This book closely analyzes this radical conservative intellectual, focusing on his often-overlooked ethnography, biogeography, travel, and creative writing, and colonial activism as well as his more widely-known political geography. Life, Earth, Colony finds that there is an as yet unexplored necropolitical impulse at the heart of Ratzel’s entire oeuvre, a preoccupation with death and dying, which had a profound impact on twentieth-century history.


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The birth of settler colonialism and its opposite: Margaret Jolly, ‘Embodied Connections: Gender, Race, and Reproduction in Oceania’, The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, 2025

17May25

Abstract: This review article juxtaposes two books, Placental Politics and Moral Figures, which
offer innovative decolonial, feminist approaches to reproductive politics and embodied
connections in colonial and contemporary Oceania. They evince an extraordinary
empirical and theoretical sophistication that has developed in scholarship over recent
decades in analysing the racialised and gendered logics of colonialism, in researching
the embodied relations between Indigenous and white settler women, and in
developing the theory and practice of Oceanic feminisms
.


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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 on display: Emma Catherine Nagler, Settling the Past: Affect, Display, and the Colonial Uncanny, PhD dissertation, Georgetown University, 2026
    • Resisting for sport: Jordan Koch, Robert Henry, Sam McKegney, ‘From locker rooms to change rooms: The Beardy’s Blackhawks and transformative hockey spaces’, International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 2026
    • The settler revolution’s global retreat: Aziz Rana, ‘The American Revolution in Global Retreat’, Dissent, 73, 2, 2026, pp. 7-17
    • Settler bots: Bronwyn Carlson, Tamika Worrell, ‘Robots Behaving Badly: Algorithmic Colonialism and the Consequences of AI’, Journal of Sociology, 2026
    • Beyond the frontier is still settler colonialism: Hisham Bustan, Elia El-Khazen, ‘Between a rock and Israel: how Jordan’s water and energy arrangements advance settler colonialism’, Territory, Politics, Governance, 2026
    • Turquoise settler colonialism: Kristen Barbara Dorsey, From Mines to Native Jewelry Markets: Unravelling the Settler Political Economy of Turquoise, PhD dissertation, UCLA, 2026
    • Settler role playing (pretendsettling): Albert R. Spencer, Justin Bell, Allyson A. Duarte Vela, Tracie Hoops, Cody Spjut, ‘Dog Eat Dog: A Philosophical Exploration of Settler-Colonialism in Role-Playing Game’, The Pluralist, 21, 2, 2026, pp. 6-22
    • Ecological settler colonialism: Irus Braverman, ‘Settler Legal Ecologies: The Colonial Governance of Nature’, Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 2026
    • More settler colonial reprocide: Hala Shoman, ‘Reprocide: examining the silenced gendered dimension of Israeli genocide in Gaza’, Journal of Gender Studies, 2026
    • Settler colonial carceral reprocide: Sarah A. Whitt, ‘Continuity of Spirit and the Carceral Continuum: Indigenous Women’s Experiences of Incarceration Across Settler Time and Space’, American Quarterly, 78, 2, 2026, pp. 263-288
    • More subaltern settlers? Fernando Tavares Pimenta, ‘The Madeiran Diaspora in Southern Angola: The Chicoronho Community of the Huíla Highlands (1884-1974)’, Portuguese Studies Review, 2025
    • Subaltern settlers? Eduard Gargallo, Jordi Sant, ‘A Central Periphery: Catalan Settlers and the Economy of Spanish Guinea (1778-1968)’, Historia Contemporánea, 81, 2026, pp. 405-438
    • The ‘natural’ rights of settlers: Steven Sarson, ‘”When They Left Their Native Land, and Setled in America”: The Fairfax County Resolves, the Origins of Colonies and Empire, and the American Revolution’, Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 115, 2, 2026, pp. 31-49
    • Lana Del Rey a settler colonialist! Bronwyn Ellerby, ‘White Femininity, Melancholia, and the Settler Colonial Aesthetic in Lana Del Rey’s America’ Motley, 4,1, 2026
    • Settler colonialism as psycho-cosmocide? Yamin Kogoya, ‘Remaking the Settler World from Inside the Papuan World: Colonial Consciousness and the Struggle for Reality in West Papua’, Kurumbi Wone Working Paper Series, 13, 2026
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