This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sage publications via the DOI in this record.This paper engages the global nexus of colonization, racialization, and urbanization through the settler colonial city of Kelowna, British Columbia (BC), Canada. Kelowna is known for its recent, rapid urbanization and for its ongoing, disproportionate ‘whiteness,’ understood as a complex political geography that enacts boundaries of inclusion and exclusion. The white urban identity of Kelowna defines Indigenous and migrant communities as ‘missing’ or ‘out-of-place,’ yet these configurations of ‘missing’ are politically contested. This paper examines how differential processes of racialization and urbanization esta...
The piece of land which we now refer to as British Columbia was first the home of a multitude of Ind...
Recently, a new body of scholarship on “settler colonialism” has emerged with the goal to analyze th...
This thesis argues that Indians and White people who were sympathetic to Native issues episodically ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from University of British Co...
This study examines white settler responses to the Oka, Ipperwash, Burnt Church, and Caledonia Crise...
This paper traces the trajectory of scholarship on the settler colonial city and argues that this li...
This major paper explores the role that settler colonization has had in the ongoing struggles of loc...
This dissertation sits at the intersection of critical international political economy and a decolon...
We live in a moment of hardening of nationalist discourses against immigration and racia...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation explores how the myth of British Columbia ...
Contributing to recent research into settler colonialism, this paper takes an on the ground look at ...
This thesis examines the social construction of white racial identities in the small, rural British ...
As colonial powers imported written material commodities to their colonies, they also imported colon...
Within the Peace River Oil Sands patch of Alberta, Canada, white settlers actively avoid awareness o...
This thesis interrogates canadian newspaper coverage of Indigenous and Iraqi peoples from 1990 to 20...
The piece of land which we now refer to as British Columbia was first the home of a multitude of Ind...
Recently, a new body of scholarship on “settler colonialism” has emerged with the goal to analyze th...
This thesis argues that Indians and White people who were sympathetic to Native issues episodically ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from University of British Co...
This study examines white settler responses to the Oka, Ipperwash, Burnt Church, and Caledonia Crise...
This paper traces the trajectory of scholarship on the settler colonial city and argues that this li...
This major paper explores the role that settler colonization has had in the ongoing struggles of loc...
This dissertation sits at the intersection of critical international political economy and a decolon...
We live in a moment of hardening of nationalist discourses against immigration and racia...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation explores how the myth of British Columbia ...
Contributing to recent research into settler colonialism, this paper takes an on the ground look at ...
This thesis examines the social construction of white racial identities in the small, rural British ...
As colonial powers imported written material commodities to their colonies, they also imported colon...
Within the Peace River Oil Sands patch of Alberta, Canada, white settlers actively avoid awareness o...
This thesis interrogates canadian newspaper coverage of Indigenous and Iraqi peoples from 1990 to 20...
The piece of land which we now refer to as British Columbia was first the home of a multitude of Ind...
Recently, a new body of scholarship on “settler colonialism” has emerged with the goal to analyze th...
This thesis argues that Indians and White people who were sympathetic to Native issues episodically ...