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Settler colonialism

Settler colonialism occurs when colonizers invade and occupy territory to permanently replace the existing society with the society of the colonizers.[1][2][3]

Boer nomads - Cape Colony, South Africa

Settler colonialism is a form of exogenous domination typically organized or supported by an imperial authority, which maintains a connection or control to the territory through the settler's colonialism.[4] Settler colonialism contrasts with exploitation colonialism, which entails an economic policy of conquering territory to exploit its population as cheap or free labor and its natural resources as raw material. In this way, settler colonialism lasts indefinitely, except in the rare event of complete evacuation or settler decolonization.[5]

Settler colonialism was especially prominent in the colonial empires of the European powers between the 16th and 20th centuries. The settling of Boers[6] in South Africa, British,[7] French, Portuguese[8] and Spanish[9] expansion in the Americas as well as the settlement of the Canary Islands by Castile are classical examples of settler colonialism.[10][11]

Origins as a theory

During the 1960s, settlement and colonization were perceived as separate phenomena from colonialism. Settlement endeavors were seen as taking place in empty areas, downplaying the Indigenous inhabitants. Later on in the 1970s and 1980s, settler colonialism was seen as bringing high living standards in contrast to the failed political systems associated with classical colonialism. Beginning in the mid-1990s, the field of settler colonial studies was established[12] distinct but connected to Indigenous studies.[13] Although often credited with originating the field, Australian historian Patrick Wolfe stated that "I didn’t invent Settler Colonial Studies. Natives have been experts in the field for centuries."[14] Additionally, Wolfe's work was preceded by others that have been influential in the field, such as Fayez Sayegh's Zionist Colonialism in Palestine and Settler Capitalism by Donald Denoon.[14][15]

Definition and concept

Settler colonialism occurs when foreign settlers arrive in an already inhabited territory to permanently inhabit it and found a new society. Intrinsically connected to this is the displacement or elimination of existing residents and destruction of their society.[1][2][3]

Some scholars describe the process as inherently genocidal, considering settler colonialism to entail the elimination of existing peoples and cultures,[16] and not only their displacement (see genocide, "the intentional destruction of a people in whole or in part").

Depending on the definition, it may be enacted by a variety of means, including mass killing of the previous inhabitants, removal of the previous inhabitants and/or cultural assimilation.[5]

Settler colonialism is distinct from migration because immigrants aim to join an existing society, not replace it.[17][18]

Examples

 
Map of colonial empires throughout the world in 1754, prior to the Seven Years' War

Settler colonial studies has often focused on former British colonies in North America, Australia and New Zealand, which are close to the complete, prototypical form of settler colonialism.[19] However, settler colonialism is not linked to any specific culture and has been practiced by non-Europeans.[2] The settler colonial paradigm has been applied to a wide variety of conflicts around the world, including the New Caledonia,[20] Western New Guinea,[21] the Andaman Islands, Argentina,[22] Australia, British Kenya, the Canary Islands,[10] Fiji, French Algeria,[23] Generalplan Ost, Hawaii,[24] Hokkaido, Ireland,[25] Israel/Palestine, Italian Libya and East Africa,[26][27] Kashmir,[28][29] Korea and Manchukuo,[30][31] Latin America, Liberia, New Zealand, northern Afghanistan,[32][33][34][35] North America, Posen and West Prussia and German South West Africa,[36] Rhodesia, Sápmi,[11][37][38] [39] South Africa, South Vietnam,[40][41][42] and Taiwan.[19][43]

Africa

 
Comparison of Africa in the years 1880 and 1913

Canary Islands

During the fifteenth century, the Kingdom of Castile sponsored expeditions by conquistadors to subjugate under Castilian rule the Macaronesian archipelago of the Canary Islands, located off the coast of Morocco and inhabited by the Indigenous Guanche people. Beginning with the start of the conquest of the island of Lanzarote on 1 May 1402 and ending with the surrender of the last Guanche resistance on Tenerife on 29 September 1496 to the now-unified Spanish crown, the archipelago was subject to a settler colonial process involving systematic enslavement, mass murder, and deportation of the Guanches, who were replaced with Spanish settlers, in a process foreshadowing the Iberian colonisation of the Americas that followed shortly thereafter. Also like in the Americas, Spanish colonialists in the Canaries quickly turned to the importation of slaves from mainland Africa as a source of labour due to the decimation of the already small Guanche population by a combination of war, disease, and brutal forced labour. Historian Mohamed Adhikari has labelled the conquest of the Canary Islands as the first overseas European settler colonial genocide.[10][11]

Morocco

As part of the Western Sahara conflict, the Kingdom of Morocco has sponsored settlement schemes that have enticed thousands of Moroccan citizens to relocate to the Moroccan-occupied Western Sahara. This regulated migration has been in effect since the Green March in 1975, and it was estimated in 2015 that Moroccan settlers accounted for two-thirds of the 500,000 inhabitants of Western Sahara.[44]

Under international law, the transfer of Moroccan citizens into the occupied territory constitutes a direct violation of Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention (cf. Turkish settlers in Northern Cyprus and Israeli settlers in the Palestinian territories).[45]

South Africa

 
Boer family traveling by covered wagon circa 1900

In 1652, the arrival of Europeans sparked the beginning of settler colonialism in South Africa. The Dutch East India Company was set up at the Cape, and imported large numbers of slaves from Africa and Asia during the mid-seventeenth century.[46] The Dutch East India Company established a refreshment station for ships sailing between Europe and the east. The initial plan by Dutch East India Company officer Jan van Riebeeck was to maintain a small community around the new fort, but the community continued to spread and settle further than originally planned.[6] There was a historic struggle to achieve the intended British sovereignty that was achieved in other parts of the Commonwealth. State sovereignty belonged to the Union of South Africa (1910–61), followed by the Republic of South Africa (1961–1994) and finally the modern day Republic of South Africa (1994–Present day).[46]

In 1948, the policy of Apartheid was introduced South Africa in order to segregate the native African population from Boer settlers and ensure the domination of the White populace over non-whites, politically, socially and economically.[47] As of 2014, the South African government has re-opened the period for land claims under the Restitution of Land Rights Amendment Act.[48]

Americas

 
U.S. westward expansion in the 19th century
 
"Indian Land For Sale" by the U.S. Department of the Interior (1911)

In colonial America, colonial powers created economic dependency and imbalance of trade, incorporating Indigenous nations into spheres of influence and controlling them indirectly with the use of Christian missionaries and alcohol.[49] With the emergence of an independent United States, desire for land and the perceived threat of permanent Indigenous political and spatial structures led to violent relocation of many Indigenous tribes to the American West, in what is known as the Trail of Tears.[50]

In response to American encroachment on native land in the Great Lakes region, the Pan-Indian confederacies of the Northwest Confederacy and Tecumseh's Confederacy emerged. Despite initial victories in both cases, such as St. Clair's defeat or the siege of Detroit, both eventually lost, thereby paving the way for American control over the region. Settlement into conquered land was rapid. Following the 1795 Treaty of Greenville, American settlers poured into southern Ohio, such that by 1810 it had a population of 230,760.[51] The defeat of the confederacies in the Great Lakes paved the way for large land loss in the region, via treaties such as the Treaty of Saginaw which saw the loss of more than 4,000,000 acres of land.[52]

Frederick Jackson Turner, the father of the "frontier thesis" of American history, noted in 1901: "Our colonial system did not start with Spanish War; the U.S. had had a colonial history from the beginning...hidden under the phraseology of 'interstate migration' and territorial organization'".[49] While the United States government and local state governments directly aided this dispossession through the use of military forces, ultimately this came about through agitation by settler society in order to gain access to Indigenous land. Especially in the US South, such land acquisition built plantation society and expanded the practice of slavery.[50] Settler colonialism participated in the formation of US cultures and lasted past the conquest, removal, or extermination of Indigenous people.[53] In 1928, Adolf Hitler spoke admiringly of the impact of white settler colonialism on the Natives, stating the US had "gunned down the millions of Redskins to a few hundred thousand, and now keep the modest remnant under observation in a cage".[54] The practice of writing the Indigenous out of history perpetrated a forgetting of the full dimensions and significance of colonialism at both the national and local levels.[49]

Eurasia

China

 
The expansion of the Qing dynasty of China

Near the end of their rule the Qing tried to colonize Xinjiang, Tibet, and other parts of the imperial frontier. To accomplish this goal they began a policy of settler colonialism by which Han Chinese were resettled on the frontier.[55] This policy was renewed by the People's Republic of China, led by Chinese Communist Party.[56][57]

Palestine, Zionism and Israel

 
Map of Israeli settlements (magenta) in the occupied West Bank in 2020. The Australian historian Patrick Wolfe, credited with originating the field, famously defined Israel as the prime example of a settler colonialist state today.[58][14] However, this notion has also received significant criticism.[59]

In 1967, the French historian Maxime Rodinson wrote an article later translated and published in English as Israel: A Colonial Settler-State?[60] Lorenzo Veracini describes Israel as a colonial state and writes that Jewish settlers could expel the British in 1948 only because they had their own colonial relationships inside and outside Israel's new borders.[61] Veracini believes the possibility of an Israeli disengagement is always latent and this relationship could be severed, through an "accommodation of a Palestinian Israeli autonomy within the institutions of the Israeli state".[62] Other commentators, such as Daiva Stasiulis, Nira Yuval-Davis,[63] and Joseph Massad in the "Post Colonial Colony: time, space and bodies in Palestine/Israel in the persistence of the Palestinian Question"[64] have included Israel in their global analysis of settler societies. Ilan Pappé describes Zionism and Israel in similar terms.[65][66] Scholar Amal Jamal, from Tel Aviv University, has stated, "Israel was created by a settler-colonial movement of Jewish immigrants".[67]

Writing in the 1990s, the Australian historian Patrick Wolfe is credited with originating the field.[14] He theorized settler colonialism as a structure (rather than an event) premised on the elimination rather than exploitation of the native population, thus distinguishing it from classical colonialism. Wolfe argued that settler colonialism was centered on the control of land, that it continued after the closing of the frontier, and that continued to exist today, classifying Israel as a modern form of settler colonialism.[58] His approach was defining for the field, but has been challenged by other scholars on the basis that many situations involve a combination of elimination and exploitation.[19]

Moses Lissak asserted that the settler-colonial thesis denies the idea that Zionism is the modern national movement of the Jewish people, seeking to reestablish a Jewish political entity in their historical territory. Zionism, Lissak argues, was both a national movement and a settlement movement at the same time, so it was not, by definition, a colonial settlement movement.[68]

Russia and the Soviet Union

 
Expansion of Russia 1500–1900

Some scholars describe Russia as a settler colonial state, particularly in its expansion into Siberia and the Russian Far East, during which it displaced and resettled Indigenous peoples, while practicing settler colonialism.[69][70][71] The annexation of Siberia and the Far East to Russia was resisted by the Indigenous peoples, while the Cossacks often committed atrocities against them.[72] During the Cold War, new forms of Indigenous repression were practiced.[73]

This colonization continued even during the Soviet Union in the 20th century.[74] The Soviet policy also sometimes included the deportation of the native population, as in the case of the Crimean Tatars.[75][unreliable source?]

Taiwan

According to a PhD thesis by Lin-chin Tsai, the ethnic makeup of Taiwan's contemporary population is largely the result of Chinese settler colonialism beginning in the seventeenth century.[76]

Australia

 
"Areas of European settlement". Censuses, articles quoted in description..)

Europeans explored and settled Australia, displacing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The Indigenous Australian population was estimated at about 795,000 at the time of European settlement.[77] The population declined steeply for 150 years following settlement from 1788, due to casualties from infectious disease, the Australian frontier wars and forced re-settlement and cultural disintegration.[78][79]

Responses

Settler colonialism exists in tension with indigenous studies. Some indigenous scholars believe that settler colonialism as a methodology can lead to overlooking indigenous responses to colonialism; however, other practitioners of indigenous studies believe that settler colonialism has important insights that are applicable to their work.[14] Settler colonialism as a theory has also been criticized from the standpoint of postcolonial theory.[14]

Political theorist Mahmoud Mamdani suggested that settlers could never succeed in their effort to become native, and therefore the only way to end settler colonialism was to erase the political significance of the settler–native dichotomy.[19]

According to Chickasaw scholar Jodi Byrd, in contrast to settler, the term arrivant refers to enslaved Africans transported against their will, and to refugees forced into the Americas due to the effects of imperialism.[80]

In his book Empire of the People: Settler Colonialism and the Foundations of Modern Democratic Thought, political scientist Adam Dahl states that while it has often been recognized that "American democratic thought and identity arose out of the distinct pattern by which English settlers colonized the new world", histories are missing the "constitutive role of colonial dispossession in shaping democratic values and ideals".[81]

See also

References

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  74. ^ Veracini, Lorenzo (2013). "'Settler Colonialism': Career of a Concept". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 41 (2): 313–333. doi:10.1080/03086534.2013.768099. S2CID 159666130. The domination of Latin America, North America, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and the Asian part of the Soviet Union by European powers all involved the migration of permanent settlers from the European country to the colonies. These places were colonized.
  75. ^ Pohl, Otto (2015). "The Deportation of the Crimean Tatars in the Context of Settler Colonialism". International Crimes and History (16).
  76. ^ Tsai, Lin-chin (2019). Re-conceptualizing Taiwan: Settler Colonial Criticism and Cultural Production (PhD thesis). University of California. Retrieved 20 May 2023. Taiwan, an island whose indigenous inhabitants are Austronesian, has been a de facto settler colony due to large-scale Han migration from China to Taiwan beginning in the seventeenth century.
  77. ^ Statistics compiled by Ørsted-Jensen for Frontier History Revisited (Brisbane 2011), page 15.
  78. ^ Page, A. (2015, September). The Australian Settler State, Indigenous Agency, and the Indigenous Sector in the Twenty First Century. Australian Political Studies Association Conference.
  79. ^ Page, A., & Petray, T. (2015). Agency and Structural Constraints: Indigenous Peoples and the Settler-State in North Queensland. Settler Colonial Studies, 5 (2).
  80. ^ Byrd, Jodi A. (6 September 2011). The Transit of Empire: Indigenous Critiques of Colonialism. U of Minnesota Press. pp. xix. ISBN 978-1-4529-3317-7.
  81. ^ Dahl 2018, p. 1.

Further reading

  • Settler Colonialism in the Twentieth Century (edited by Susan Pedersen and Caroline Elkins), Routledge, 2005.
  • Veracini, Lorenzo (2010). Settler Colonialism: A Theoretical Overview. Hampshire, UK: Palgrave MacMillan. p. 182. ISBN 9780230284906.
  • Wolfe, Patrick, 'Traces of History: Elementary Structures of Race' (Verso 2016)
  • Wolfe, Patrick (December 2006). "Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native". Journal of Genocide Research. 8 (4): 387–409. doi:10.1080/14623520601056240. S2CID 143873621.

External links

  • Articles on Settler Colonialism in Western American Literature

settler, colonialism, occurs, when, colonizers, invade, occupy, territory, permanently, replace, existing, society, with, society, colonizers, boer, nomads, cape, colony, south, africa, form, exogenous, domination, typically, organized, supported, imperial, au. Settler colonialism occurs when colonizers invade and occupy territory to permanently replace the existing society with the society of the colonizers 1 2 3 Boer nomads Cape Colony South Africa Settler colonialism is a form of exogenous domination typically organized or supported by an imperial authority which maintains a connection or control to the territory through the settler s colonialism 4 Settler colonialism contrasts with exploitation colonialism which entails an economic policy of conquering territory to exploit its population as cheap or free labor and its natural resources as raw material In this way settler colonialism lasts indefinitely except in the rare event of complete evacuation or settler decolonization 5 Settler colonialism was especially prominent in the colonial empires of the European powers between the 16th and 20th centuries The settling of Boers 6 in South Africa British 7 French Portuguese 8 and Spanish 9 expansion in the Americas as well as the settlement of the Canary Islands by Castile are classical examples of settler colonialism 10 11 Contents 1 Origins as a theory 2 Definition and concept 3 Examples 3 1 Africa 3 1 1 Canary Islands 3 1 2 Morocco 3 1 3 South Africa 3 2 Americas 3 3 Eurasia 3 3 1 China 3 3 2 Palestine Zionism and Israel 3 3 3 Russia and the Soviet Union 3 3 4 Taiwan 3 4 Australia 4 Responses 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksOrigins as a theoryDuring the 1960s settlement and colonization were perceived as separate phenomena from colonialism Settlement endeavors were seen as taking place in empty areas downplaying the Indigenous inhabitants Later on in the 1970s and 1980s settler colonialism was seen as bringing high living standards in contrast to the failed political systems associated with classical colonialism Beginning in the mid 1990s the field of settler colonial studies was established 12 distinct but connected to Indigenous studies 13 Although often credited with originating the field Australian historian Patrick Wolfe stated that I didn t invent Settler Colonial Studies Natives have been experts in the field for centuries 14 Additionally Wolfe s work was preceded by others that have been influential in the field such as Fayez Sayegh s Zionist Colonialism in Palestine and Settler Capitalism by Donald Denoon 14 15 Definition and conceptSettler colonialism occurs when foreign settlers arrive in an already inhabited territory to permanently inhabit it and found a new society Intrinsically connected to this is the displacement or elimination of existing residents and destruction of their society 1 2 3 Some scholars describe the process as inherently genocidal considering settler colonialism to entail the elimination of existing peoples and cultures 16 and not only their displacement see genocide the intentional destruction of a people in whole or in part Depending on the definition it may be enacted by a variety of means including mass killing of the previous inhabitants removal of the previous inhabitants and or cultural assimilation 5 Settler colonialism is distinct from migration because immigrants aim to join an existing society not replace it 17 18 Examples nbsp Map of colonial empires throughout the world in 1754 prior to the Seven Years War Settler colonial studies has often focused on former British colonies in North America Australia and New Zealand which are close to the complete prototypical form of settler colonialism 19 However settler colonialism is not linked to any specific culture and has been practiced by non Europeans 2 The settler colonial paradigm has been applied to a wide variety of conflicts around the world including the New Caledonia 20 Western New Guinea 21 the Andaman Islands Argentina 22 Australia British Kenya the Canary Islands 10 Fiji French Algeria 23 Generalplan Ost Hawaii 24 Hokkaido Ireland 25 Israel Palestine Italian Libya and East Africa 26 27 Kashmir 28 29 Korea and Manchukuo 30 31 Latin America Liberia New Zealand northern Afghanistan 32 33 34 35 North America Posen and West Prussia and German South West Africa 36 Rhodesia Sapmi 11 37 38 39 South Africa South Vietnam 40 41 42 and Taiwan 19 43 Africa See also White Africans of European ancestry Pied Noir and French conquest of Algeria nbsp Comparison of Africa in the years 1880 and 1913 Canary Islands Further information Conquest of the Canary Islands During the fifteenth century the Kingdom of Castile sponsored expeditions by conquistadors to subjugate under Castilian rule the Macaronesian archipelago of the Canary Islands located off the coast of Morocco and inhabited by the Indigenous Guanche people Beginning with the start of the conquest of the island of Lanzarote on 1 May 1402 and ending with the surrender of the last Guanche resistance on Tenerife on 29 September 1496 to the now unified Spanish crown the archipelago was subject to a settler colonial process involving systematic enslavement mass murder and deportation of the Guanches who were replaced with Spanish settlers in a process foreshadowing the Iberian colonisation of the Americas that followed shortly thereafter Also like in the Americas Spanish colonialists in the Canaries quickly turned to the importation of slaves from mainland Africa as a source of labour due to the decimation of the already small Guanche population by a combination of war disease and brutal forced labour Historian Mohamed Adhikari has labelled the conquest of the Canary Islands as the first overseas European settler colonial genocide 10 11 Morocco This section is an excerpt from Moroccan settlers edit As part of the Western Sahara conflict the Kingdom of Morocco has sponsored settlement schemes that have enticed thousands of Moroccan citizens to relocate to the Moroccan occupied Western Sahara This regulated migration has been in effect since the Green March in 1975 and it was estimated in 2015 that Moroccan settlers accounted for two thirds of the 500 000 inhabitants of Western Sahara 44 Under international law the transfer of Moroccan citizens into the occupied territory constitutes a direct violation of Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention cf Turkish settlers in Northern Cyprus and Israeli settlers in the Palestinian territories 45 South Africa nbsp Boer family traveling by covered wagon circa 1900 In 1652 the arrival of Europeans sparked the beginning of settler colonialism in South Africa The Dutch East India Company was set up at the Cape and imported large numbers of slaves from Africa and Asia during the mid seventeenth century 46 The Dutch East India Company established a refreshment station for ships sailing between Europe and the east The initial plan by Dutch East India Company officer Jan van Riebeeck was to maintain a small community around the new fort but the community continued to spread and settle further than originally planned 6 There was a historic struggle to achieve the intended British sovereignty that was achieved in other parts of the Commonwealth State sovereignty belonged to the Union of South Africa 1910 61 followed by the Republic of South Africa 1961 1994 and finally the modern day Republic of South Africa 1994 Present day 46 In 1948 the policy of Apartheid was introduced South Africa in order to segregate the native African population from Boer settlers and ensure the domination of the White populace over non whites politically socially and economically 47 As of 2014 the South African government has re opened the period for land claims under the Restitution of Land Rights Amendment Act 48 Americas Main articles European colonization of the Americas White Americans Manifest destiny and Native American genocide in the United States nbsp U S westward expansion in the 19th century nbsp Indian Land For Sale by the U S Department of the Interior 1911 In colonial America colonial powers created economic dependency and imbalance of trade incorporating Indigenous nations into spheres of influence and controlling them indirectly with the use of Christian missionaries and alcohol 49 With the emergence of an independent United States desire for land and the perceived threat of permanent Indigenous political and spatial structures led to violent relocation of many Indigenous tribes to the American West in what is known as the Trail of Tears 50 In response to American encroachment on native land in the Great Lakes region the Pan Indian confederacies of the Northwest Confederacy and Tecumseh s Confederacy emerged Despite initial victories in both cases such as St Clair s defeat or the siege of Detroit both eventually lost thereby paving the way for American control over the region Settlement into conquered land was rapid Following the 1795 Treaty of Greenville American settlers poured into southern Ohio such that by 1810 it had a population of 230 760 51 The defeat of the confederacies in the Great Lakes paved the way for large land loss in the region via treaties such as the Treaty of Saginaw which saw the loss of more than 4 000 000 acres of land 52 Frederick Jackson Turner the father of the frontier thesis of American history noted in 1901 Our colonial system did not start with Spanish War the U S had had a colonial history from the beginning hidden under the phraseology of interstate migration and territorial organization 49 While the United States government and local state governments directly aided this dispossession through the use of military forces ultimately this came about through agitation by settler society in order to gain access to Indigenous land Especially in the US South such land acquisition built plantation society and expanded the practice of slavery 50 Settler colonialism participated in the formation of US cultures and lasted past the conquest removal or extermination of Indigenous people 53 In 1928 Adolf Hitler spoke admiringly of the impact of white settler colonialism on the Natives stating the US had gunned down the millions of Redskins to a few hundred thousand and now keep the modest remnant under observation in a cage 54 The practice of writing the Indigenous out of history perpetrated a forgetting of the full dimensions and significance of colonialism at both the national and local levels 49 Eurasia China See also Chinese expansionism Sinicization Dzungar genocide Southward expansion of the Han dynasty Sinicization of Tibet Migration to Xinjiang Persecution of Uyghurs in China and Qin campaign against the Baiyue nbsp The expansion of the Qing dynasty of China Near the end of their rule the Qing tried to colonize Xinjiang Tibet and other parts of the imperial frontier To accomplish this goal they began a policy of settler colonialism by which Han Chinese were resettled on the frontier 55 This policy was renewed by the People s Republic of China led by Chinese Communist Party 56 57 Palestine Zionism and Israel Main article Zionism as settler colonialism nbsp Map of Israeli settlements magenta in the occupied West Bank in 2020 The Australian historian Patrick Wolfe credited with originating the field famously defined Israel as the prime example of a settler colonialist state today 58 14 However this notion has also received significant criticism 59 In 1967 the French historian Maxime Rodinson wrote an article later translated and published in English as Israel A Colonial Settler State 60 Lorenzo Veracini describes Israel as a colonial state and writes that Jewish settlers could expel the British in 1948 only because they had their own colonial relationships inside and outside Israel s new borders 61 Veracini believes the possibility of an Israeli disengagement is always latent and this relationship could be severed through an accommodation of a Palestinian Israeli autonomy within the institutions of the Israeli state 62 Other commentators such as Daiva Stasiulis Nira Yuval Davis 63 and Joseph Massad in the Post Colonial Colony time space and bodies in Palestine Israel in the persistence of the Palestinian Question 64 have included Israel in their global analysis of settler societies Ilan Pappe describes Zionism and Israel in similar terms 65 66 Scholar Amal Jamal from Tel Aviv University has stated Israel was created by a settler colonial movement of Jewish immigrants 67 Writing in the 1990s the Australian historian Patrick Wolfe is credited with originating the field 14 He theorized settler colonialism as a structure rather than an event premised on the elimination rather than exploitation of the native population thus distinguishing it from classical colonialism Wolfe argued that settler colonialism was centered on the control of land that it continued after the closing of the frontier and that continued to exist today classifying Israel as a modern form of settler colonialism 58 His approach was defining for the field but has been challenged by other scholars on the basis that many situations involve a combination of elimination and exploitation 19 Moses Lissak asserted that the settler colonial thesis denies the idea that Zionism is the modern national movement of the Jewish people seeking to reestablish a Jewish political entity in their historical territory Zionism Lissak argues was both a national movement and a settlement movement at the same time so it was not by definition a colonial settlement movement 68 Russia and the Soviet Union Main articles Ethnic Russians in post Soviet states Expansion of Russia 1500 1800 Russian conquest of Siberia Russian conquest of the Caucasus Circassian genocide Russification and Population transfer in the Soviet Union nbsp Expansion of Russia 1500 1900 Some scholars describe Russia as a settler colonial state particularly in its expansion into Siberia and the Russian Far East during which it displaced and resettled Indigenous peoples while practicing settler colonialism 69 70 71 The annexation of Siberia and the Far East to Russia was resisted by the Indigenous peoples while the Cossacks often committed atrocities against them 72 During the Cold War new forms of Indigenous repression were practiced 73 This colonization continued even during the Soviet Union in the 20th century 74 The Soviet policy also sometimes included the deportation of the native population as in the case of the Crimean Tatars 75 unreliable source Taiwan Further information Han Taiwanese and Taiwanese indigenous peoples According to a PhD thesis by Lin chin Tsai the ethnic makeup of Taiwan s contemporary population is largely the result of Chinese settler colonialism beginning in the seventeenth century 76 Australia See also Europeans in Oceania Cultural assimilation List of massacres of Indigenous Australians and Australian frontier wars nbsp Areas of European settlement Censuses articles quoted in description Europeans explored and settled Australia displacing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples The Indigenous Australian population was estimated at about 795 000 at the time of European settlement 77 The population declined steeply for 150 years following settlement from 1788 due to casualties from infectious disease the Australian frontier wars and forced re settlement and cultural disintegration 78 79 ResponsesSettler colonialism exists in tension with indigenous studies Some indigenous scholars believe that settler colonialism as a methodology can lead to overlooking indigenous responses to colonialism however other practitioners of indigenous studies believe that settler colonialism has important insights that are applicable to their work 14 Settler colonialism as a theory has also been criticized from the standpoint of postcolonial theory 14 Political theorist Mahmoud Mamdani suggested that settlers could never succeed in their effort to become native and therefore the only way to end settler colonialism was to erase the political significance of the settler native dichotomy 19 According to Chickasaw scholar Jodi Byrd in contrast to settler the term arrivant refers to enslaved Africans transported against their will and to refugees forced into the Americas due to the effects of imperialism 80 In his book Empire of the People Settler Colonialism and the Foundations of Modern Democratic Thought political scientist Adam Dahl states that while it has often been recognized that American democratic thought and identity arose out of the distinct pattern by which English settlers colonized the new world histories are missing the constitutive role of colonial dispossession in shaping democratic values and ideals 81 See alsoPre modern human migration European emigration Transmigration programReferences a b Carey Jane Silverstein Ben 2 January 2020 Thinking with and beyond settler colonial studies new histories after the postcolonial Postcolonial Studies 23 1 1 20 doi 10 1080 13688790 2020 1719569 hdl 1885 204080 S2CID 214046615 The key phrases Wolfe coined here that invasion is a structure not an event that settler colonial structures have a logic of elimination of Indigenous peoples that settlers come to stay and that they destroy to replace have been taken up as the defining precepts of the field and are now cited by countless scholars across numerous disciplines a b c Cavanagh Edward Veracini Lorenzo 2016 Introduction The Routledge Handbook of the History of Settler Colonialism Taylor amp Francis p 29 ISBN 978 1 134 82847 0 Settler colonialism is a system defined by unequal relationships like colonialism where an exogenous collective aims to locally and permanently replace indigenous ones unlike colonialism settler colonialism has no geographical cultural or chronological bounds It can happen at any time and everyone is a settler if they are part of a collective and sovereign displacement that moves to stay that moves to establish a permanent homeland by way of displacement a b McKay Dwanna L Vinyeta Kirsten Norgaard Kari Marie September 2020 Theorizing race and settler colonialism within U S sociology Sociology Compass 14 9 doi 10 1111 soc4 12821 ISSN 1751 9020 S2CID 225377069 Settler colonialism describes the logic and operation of power when colonizers arrive and settle on lands already inhabited by another group Importantly settler colonialism operates through a logic of elimination seeking to eradicate the original inhabitants through violence and other genocidal acts and to replace the existing spiritual epistemological political social and ecological systems with those of the settler society LeFevre Tate Settler Colonialism oxfordbibliographies com Tate A LeFevre Retrieved 19 October 2017 Though often conflated with colonialism more generally settler colonialism is a distinct imperial formation Both colonialism and settler colonialism are premised on exogenous domination but only settler colonialism seeks to replace the original population of the colonized territory with a new society of settlers usually from the colonial metropole a b Wolfe Patrick 2006 Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native Journal of Genocide Research 8 4 387 409 doi 10 1080 14623520601056240 S2CID 143873621 a b Fourie J 2014 Settler Skills and Colonial Development The Huguenot Wine Makers in Eighteenth Century Dutch South Africa Economic History Review 67 4 932 963 doi 10 1111 1468 0289 12033 S2CID 152735090 Free Melissa November 2018 Settler Colonialism Victorian Literature and Culture 46 3 4 876 882 doi 10 1017 S1060150318001080 ISSN 1060 1503 Cartwright Mark Portuguese Empire World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 19 November 2023 Taylor Lucy Lublin Geraldine 3 July 2021 Settler colonial studies and Latin America Settler Colonial Studies 11 3 259 270 doi 10 1080 2201473X 2021 1999155 ISSN 2201 473X S2CID 244740045 a b c Adhikari Mohamed 7 September 2017 Europe s First Settler Colonial Incursion into Africa The Genocide of Aboriginal Canary Islanders African Historical Review 49 1 1 26 doi 10 1080 17532523 2017 1336863 S2CID 165086773 Retrieved 7 May 2022 a b c Adhikari Mohamed 25 July 2022 Destroying to Replace Settler Genocides of Indigenous Peoples Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Company pp 1 32 ISBN 978 1647920548 Veracini Lorenzo 2013 Settler Colonialism Career of a Concept The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41 2 313 333 doi 10 1080 03086534 2013 768099 S2CID 159666130 Shoemaker Nancy 1 October 2015 A Typology of Colonialism Perspectives on History American Historical Association Retrieved 28 April 2022 a b c d e f Kauanui J Kehaulani 3 April 2021 False dilemmas and settler colonial studies response to Lorenzo Veracini Is Settler Colonial Studies Even Useful Postcolonial Studies 24 2 290 296 doi 10 1080 13688790 2020 1857023 ISSN 1368 8790 S2CID 233986432 Veracini Lorenzo June 2013 Settler Colonialism Career of a Concept The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41 2 313 333 doi 10 1080 03086534 2013 768099 S2CID 159666130 Short Damien 2016 Redefining Genocide Settler Colonialism Social Death and Ecocide Bloomsbury Publishing p 69 ISBN 978 1 84813 546 8 Mamdani Mahmood 2020 Neither Settler nor Native The Making and Unmaking of Permanent Minorities Harvard University Press p 253 ISBN 978 0 674 24997 4 Veracini Lorenzo 2015 Settlers are not Migrants The Settler Colonial Present Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 32 48 ISBN 978 1 137 37247 5 a b c d Englert Sai 2020 Settlers Workers and the Logic of Accumulation by Dispossession Antipode 52 6 1647 1666 Bibcode 2020Antip 52 1647E doi 10 1111 anti 12659 hdl 1887 3220822 S2CID 225643194 New Caledonia set for 2nd referendum on independence from France Al Jazeera 3 October 2020 McNamee Lachlan 15 May 2020 Indonesian Settler Colonialism in West Papua Larson Carolyne R 2020 The Conquest of the Desert Argentina s Indigenous Peoples and the Battle for History University of New Mexico Press ISBN 9780826362087 Barclay Fiona Chopin Charlotte Ann Evans Martin 12 January 2017 Introduction settler colonialism and French Algeria Settler Colonial Studies 8 2 115 130 doi 10 1080 2201473X 2016 1273862 hdl 1893 25105 S2CID 151527670 Takumi Roy 1994 Challenging U S Militarism in Hawai i and Okinawa Race Poverty amp the Environment 4 5 4 1 8 9 ISSN 1532 2874 JSTOR 41555279 Connolly S 2017 Settler colonialism in Ireland from the English conquest to the nineteenth century In E Cavanagh amp L Veracini Eds The Routledge Handbook of the History of Settler Colonialism pp 49 64 Article 4 Routledge Ertola Emanuele 15 March 2016 Terra promessa migration and settler colonialism in Libya 1911 1970 Settler Colonial Studies 7 3 340 353 doi 10 1080 2201473X 2016 1153251 S2CID 164009698 Retrieved 7 May 2022 Veracini Lorenzo Winter 2018 Italian Colonialism through a Settler Colonial Studies Lens Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 19 3 doi 10 1353 cch 2018 0023 S2CID 165512037 Retrieved 7 May 2022 Raman Anita D 2004 Of Rivers and Human Rights The Northern Areas Pakistan s forgotten colony in Jammu and Kashmir International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 11 1 2 187 228 doi 10 1163 157181104323383929 JSTOR 24675261 Mushtaq Samreen Mudasir Amin 16 October 2021 We will memorise our home exploring settler colonialism as an interpretive framework for Kashmir Third World Quarterly 42 12 3012 3029 doi 10 1080 01436597 2021 1984877 S2CID 244607271 Retrieved 7 May 2022 Lu Sidney Xu June 2019 Eastward Ho Japanese Settler Colonialism in Hokkaido and the Making of Japanese Migration to the American West 1869 1888 The Journal of Asian Studies 78 3 521 547 doi 10 1017 S0021911819000147 S2CID 197847093 Retrieved 7 May 2022 Uchida Jun 3 March 2014 Brokers of Empire Japanese Settler Colonialism in Korea 1876 1945 Vol 337 Harvard University Asia Center doi 10 2307 j ctt1x07x37 ISBN 978 0674492028 JSTOR j ctt1x07x37 S2CID 259606289 Christian Bleuer 2012 State building migration and economic development on the frontiers of northern Afghanistan and southern Tajikistan Journal of Eurasian Studies 3 69 79 doi 10 1016 j euras 2011 10 008 Christian Bleuer 17 October 2014 From Slavers to Warlords Descriptions of Afghanistan s Uzbeks in Western Writing Afghanistan Analysts Network Mundt Alex Schmeidl Susanne Ziai Shafiqullah 1 June 2009 Between a Rock and a Hard Place The Return of Internally Displaced Persons to Northern Afghanistan Brookings Institution Paying for the Taliban s Crimes Abuses Against Ethnic Pashtuns in Northern Afghanistan PDF Human Rights Watch April 2002 Lerp Dorte 11 October 2013 Farmers to the Frontier Settler Colonialism in the Eastern Prussian Provinces and German Southwest Africa Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41 4 567 583 doi 10 1080 03086534 2013 836361 S2CID 159707103 Retrieved 7 May 2022 Veracini Lorenzo 25 March 2013 Settler Colonialism Career of a Concept Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41 2 313 333 doi 10 1080 03086534 2013 768099 S2CID 159666130 Retrieved 7 May 2022 Browning Christopher R 8 February 2022 Yehuda Bauer the Concepts of Holocaust and Genocide and the Issue of Settler Colonialism The Journal of Holocaust Research 36 1 30 38 doi 10 1080 25785648 2021 2012985 S2CID 246652960 Retrieved 30 April 2022 Rahman Smita A Gordy Katherine A Deylami Shirin S 2022 Globalizing Political Theory Taylor and Francis ISBN 9781000788884 Salemink Oscar 2003 The Ethnography of Vietnam s Central Highlanders A Historical Contextualization 1850 1990 University of Hawaii Press pp 35 336 ISBN 978 0 8248 2579 9 Nguyen Duy Lap 2019 The unimagined community Imperialism and culture in South Vietnam Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 52614 398 3 Anne Valerie Schweyer 2019 The Chams in Vietnam a great unknown civilization French Academic Network of Asian Studies Tsai Lin chin 2019 Re conceptualizing Taiwan Settler Colonial Criticism and Cultural Production Thesis UCLA Shefte Whitney 6 January 2015 Western Sahara s stranded refugees consider renewal of Morocco conflict the Guardian Mixed Reviews for Morocco as Fourth Committee Hears Petitioners on Western Sahara Amid Continuing Decolonization Debate Meetings Coverage and Press Releases a b Cavanagh E 2013 Settler colonialism and land rights in South Africa Possession and dispossession on the Orange River United Kingdom Palgrave Macmillan pp 10 16 ISBN 978 1 137 30577 0 Mayne Alan 1999 From Politics Past to Politics Future An Integrated Analysis of Current and Emergent Paradigms Westport Connecticut Praeger p 52 ISBN 978 0 275 96151 0 Weinberg T 2015 The Griqua Past and the Limits of South African History 1902 1994 Settler Colonialism and Land Rights in South Africa Possession and Dispossession on the Orange River Journal of Southern African Studies 41 211 214 doi 10 1080 03057070 2015 991591 S2CID 144750398 a b c Dunbar Ortiz Roxanne 2014 An Indigenous Peoples History of the United States Boston Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 0040 3 a b Wolfe 2006 https www issuelab org resources 3973 3973 pdf The 1819 Treaty of Saginaw 26 November 2019 Spady James O Neil 2020 Education and the Racial Dynamics of Settler Colonialism in Early America Georgia and South Carolina ca 1700 ca 1820 Routledge ISBN 978 0367437169 Moon David 2020 The American Steppes Cambridge University Press p 44 Wang Ju Han Zoe Roche Gerald 16 March 2021 Urbanizing Minority Minzu in the PRC Insights from the Literature on Settler Colonialism Modern China 48 3 593 616 doi 10 1177 0097700421995135 ISSN 0097 7004 S2CID 233620981 Brooks Jonathan 2021 Settler Colonialism Primitive Accumulation and Biopolitics in Xinjiang China doi 10 2139 ssrn 3965577 ISSN 1556 5068 SSRN 3965577 Clarke Michael 16 February 2021 Settler Colonialism and the Path toward Cultural Genocide in Xinjiang Global Responsibility to Protect 13 1 9 19 doi 10 1163 1875 984X 13010002 ISSN 1875 9858 S2CID 233974395 a b Wolfe Patrick December 2006 Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native Journal of Genocide Research 8 4 387 409 doi 10 1080 14623520601056240 ISSN 1462 3528 Troen S Ilan 2007 De Judaizing the Homeland Academic Politics in Rewriting the History of Palestine Israel Affairs 13 4 872 884 doi 10 1080 13537120701445372 S2CID 216148316 Rodinson Maxime Israel fait colonial Les Temps Moderne 1967 Republished in English as Israel A Colonial Settler State New York Monad Press 1973 Israel could celebrate its anticolonial anti British struggle exactly because it was able to establish a number of colonial relationships within and without the borders of 1948 Lorenzo Veracini Borderlands vol 6 No 2 2007 Veracini Lorenzo Israel and Settler Society London Pluto Press 2006 Unsettling Settler Societies Articulations of Gender Race Ethnicity and Class Vol 11 Nira Yuval Davis Editor Daiva K Stasiulis Editor Paperback 352pp ISBN 978 0 8039 8694 7 August 1995 SAGE Publications Post Colonial Colony time space and bodies in Palestine Israel in the persistence of the Palestinian Question Routledge NY 2006 and The Pre Occupation of Post Colonial Studies ed Fawzia Afzal Khan and Kalpana Rahita Seshadri Durham Duke University Press The Palestinian Enclaves Struggle An Interview with Ilan Pappe King s Review Magazine Video Decolonizing Israel Ilan Pappe on Viewing Israel Palestine Through the Lens of Settler Colonialism Antiwar com 5 April 2017 Amal Jamal 2011 Arab Minority Nationalism in Israel The Politics of Indigeneity Taylor amp Francis p 48 ISBN 978 1 136 82412 8 Moshe Lissak Critical Sociology and Establishment Sociology in the Israeli Academic Community Ideological Struggles or Academic Discourse Israel Studies 1 1 1996 247 294 Sunderland Willard 2000 The Colonization Question Visions of Colonization in Late Imperial Russia Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas 48 2 210 232 JSTOR 41050526 Forsyth James 1992 A history of the peoples of Siberia Internet Archive Cambridge University Press pp 201 228 241 346 ISBN 978 0 521 40311 5 Lantzeff George V Pierce Richard A 1973 Eastward to Empire Exploration and Conquest on the Russian Open Frontier to 1750 McGill Queen s University Press doi 10 2307 j ctt1w0dbpp JSTOR j ctt1w0dbpp Hill Nathaniel 25 October 2021 Conquering Siberia The Case for Genocide Recognition www genocidewatchblog com Retrieved 3 April 2023 Bartels Dennis Bartels Alice L 2006 Indigenous Peoples of the Russian North and Cold War Ideology Anthropologica 48 2 265 279 doi 10 2307 25605315 JSTOR 25605315 Veracini Lorenzo 2013 Settler Colonialism Career of a Concept The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41 2 313 333 doi 10 1080 03086534 2013 768099 S2CID 159666130 The domination of Latin America North America Australia New Zealand South Africa and the Asian part of the Soviet Union by European powers all involved the migration of permanent settlers from the European country to the colonies These places were colonized Pohl Otto 2015 The Deportation of the Crimean Tatars in the Context of Settler Colonialism International Crimes and History 16 Tsai Lin chin 2019 Re conceptualizing Taiwan Settler Colonial Criticism and Cultural Production PhD thesis University of California Retrieved 20 May 2023 Taiwan an island whose indigenous inhabitants are Austronesian has been a de facto settler colony due to large scale Han migration from China to Taiwan beginning in the seventeenth century Statistics compiled by Orsted Jensen for Frontier History Revisited Brisbane 2011 page 15 Page A 2015 September The Australian Settler State Indigenous Agency and the Indigenous Sector in the Twenty First Century Australian Political Studies Association Conference Page A amp Petray T 2015 Agency and Structural Constraints Indigenous Peoples and the Settler State in North Queensland Settler Colonial Studies 5 2 Byrd Jodi A 6 September 2011 The Transit of Empire Indigenous Critiques of Colonialism U of Minnesota Press pp xix ISBN 978 1 4529 3317 7 Dahl 2018 p 1 Further readingAdhikari Mohamed 2021 Civilian Driven Violence and the Genocide of Indigenous Peoples in Settler Societies Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 41177 5 Cox Alicia Settler Colonialism Oxford Bibliographies OUP Retrieved 21 January 2021 Dahl Adam 2018 Empire of the People Settler Colonialism and the Foundations of Modern Democratic Thought University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 2607 6 Englert Sai 2022 Settler Colonialism An Introduction Pluto Press ISBN 978 0 7453 4490 4 Belich James 2009 Replenishing the earth the settler revolution and the rise of the Anglo world 1783 1939 Oxford Oxford University Press p 573 ISBN 978 0 19 929727 6 Horne Gerald The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism The Roots of Slavery White Supremacy and Capitalism in Seventeenth Century North America and the Caribbean Monthly Review Press 2018 243p ISBN 9781583676639 Horne Gerald The Dawning of the Apocalypse The Roots of Slavery White Supremacy Settler Colonialism and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century Monthly Review Press 2020 ISBN 978 1 58367 875 6 Manjapra Kris 2020 Settlement Colonialism in Global Perspective Cambridge University Press pp 43 70 ISBN 978 1 108 42526 1 Marx Christoph 2017 Settler Colonies EGO European History Online Mainz Institute of European History retrieved March 17 2021 pdf Mikdashi Maya 2013 What is settler colonialism American Indian Culture and Research Journal 37 2 23 34 Schuessler Jennifer What Is Settler Colonialism New York Times Jan 22 2024 Settler Colonialism in the Twentieth Century edited by Susan Pedersen and Caroline Elkins Routledge 2005 Veracini Lorenzo 2010 Settler Colonialism A Theoretical Overview Hampshire UK Palgrave MacMillan p 182 ISBN 9780230284906 Wolfe Patrick Traces of History Elementary Structures of Race Verso 2016 Wolfe Patrick December 2006 Settler colonialism and the elimination of the native Journal of Genocide Research 8 4 387 409 doi 10 1080 14623520601056240 S2CID 143873621 External linksArticles on Settler Colonialism in Western American Literature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Settler colonialism amp oldid 1220086504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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