One of the most powerful narratives deployed by colonists in the nineteenth century was that the colonized natives were inherently too weak to survive contact with those who were colonizing them-the Dying Native story. I argue that to understand the history of this story, we should differentiate between three senses in which it could be taken as true or false: physical destruction, genetic adulteration and loss of distinct culture. The physical destruction version of the "Dying Native" was contested by some settler-colonial governments as they developed the capacity to manage and measure the numbers of those whom they classified as "Indian" or "Māori" or "Aboriginal". However, the "Dying Native" story persisted as a narrative of these peopl...
Intellectual networks linking humanitarians in Britain, Western Australia, and New Zealand in the 18...
This thesis examines links between Māori deficit statistics, Māori experiences of historical interge...
In Australia and New Zealand, the realization of the knowledge object ‘national population’ makes it...
Critical scholarship on colonisation tells us that official statistics have reflected the perspectiv...
In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the historical demography of American Ind...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
In recent years an increasing number of scholars have directed attention toward Native American hist...
The Māori of Aotearoa New Zealand are a case-study of the negative impacts of colonization on the he...
On both sides of the Tasman Sea in the nineteenth century, many settlers believed the indigenous peo...
Statistics about Indigenous peoples are a common feature of Anglo-colonizing nation states such as C...
Nation state building, competing sovereign claims, the capitalist drive for land and resources fuell...
There is growing consensus around the idea that much of our understanding on the causality of geneti...
It has been long questioned as to if and how cultural and socioeconomic differences play a role in d...
By the early twentieth century the notion that ethnic populations would dissipate was a commonly hel...
While the census is sometimes understood to be an objectifying practice that constructs and makes up...
Intellectual networks linking humanitarians in Britain, Western Australia, and New Zealand in the 18...
This thesis examines links between Māori deficit statistics, Māori experiences of historical interge...
In Australia and New Zealand, the realization of the knowledge object ‘national population’ makes it...
Critical scholarship on colonisation tells us that official statistics have reflected the perspectiv...
In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the historical demography of American Ind...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
In recent years an increasing number of scholars have directed attention toward Native American hist...
The Māori of Aotearoa New Zealand are a case-study of the negative impacts of colonization on the he...
On both sides of the Tasman Sea in the nineteenth century, many settlers believed the indigenous peo...
Statistics about Indigenous peoples are a common feature of Anglo-colonizing nation states such as C...
Nation state building, competing sovereign claims, the capitalist drive for land and resources fuell...
There is growing consensus around the idea that much of our understanding on the causality of geneti...
It has been long questioned as to if and how cultural and socioeconomic differences play a role in d...
By the early twentieth century the notion that ethnic populations would dissipate was a commonly hel...
While the census is sometimes understood to be an objectifying practice that constructs and makes up...
Intellectual networks linking humanitarians in Britain, Western Australia, and New Zealand in the 18...
This thesis examines links between Māori deficit statistics, Māori experiences of historical interge...
In Australia and New Zealand, the realization of the knowledge object ‘national population’ makes it...