Article | 27-April-2020
Louis Everuss
Borderlands, Volume 19 , ISSUE 1, 115–146
Article | 11-March-2021
and sovereignty. The colonialism unpacked here is settler colonialism, as opposed to franchise colonialism, where the former focuses on extraction through land settlement and eradication of inhabitants (Wolfe, 1999; Kauanui and Warrior, 2018).
Powwow and the military
The powwow
The powwow, or wacipi, offers a present-day representation and expression of Lakota cultural practice, while also acting as a space of colonial resistance. When dancers enter the circle, they boldly affirm Native
JUSTIN DE LEON
Borderlands, Volume 19 , ISSUE 2, 130–156
research-article | 02-November-2021
histories and their intimacy with tourism ventures, we seek to understand how the seemingly disconnected realms of settler colonialism, pest eradication programs and tourism are sutured together by fantasies of ‘restoration’: restoring places to a ‘pristine’ pre-invasion state and re-storying First Nations’ possession as a perpetual absence.
The concepts of biopolitics theorised by Michel Foucault (1978), and necropolitics and territorialisation from Achille Mbembe (2003) underpin our analysis. In his
ROWENA LENNOX,
FIONA PROBYN-RAPSEY
Borderlands, Volume 20 , ISSUE 1, 49–88
research-article | 02-November-2021
of infrastructure has particular resonance. As two settler scholars implicated in, and benefitting from, settler colonialism, we aim our analysis at deconstructing and illuminating some of the ways in which this version of settler colonialism is reproduced. In so doing, we have chosen to focus on the processes, recommendations, and findings of the BCUC Inquiry not because such an analysis itself is emancipatory, but rather to point to other ways in which communities are working to reaffirm their
JOSHUA K. MCEVOY,
LIAM MIDZAIN-GOBIN
Borderlands, Volume 20 , ISSUE 1, 140–170