Indigeneity and Sovereignty

Indigenous Peoples of North America

  • Alfred, T. (1999). Peace, power, righteousness: An Indigenous manifesto. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Archibald, J., Lee-Morgan, J., & De Santolo, J. (Eds.). (2019). Decolonizing research: Indigenous storywork as methodology. Zed Books.
  • Barker, J. (2005). Sovereignty matters: Locations of contestation and possibility in Indigenous struggles for self-determination. University of Nebraska Press.
  • Barker, J. (Ed.) (2017). Critically sovereign: Indigenous gender, sexuality, and feminist studies. Duke University Press.
  • Barnd, N.B. (2017). Native space: Geographic strategies to unsettle settler colonialism. Oregon State University Press.
  • Brooks, L. (2008). The common pot: The recovery of Native space in the Northeast. Indigenous Americas. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Corntassel, J. & Witmer II, R.C. (2008). Forced federalism: Contemporary challenges to Indigenous nationhood. American Indian Law and Policy 3. University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Coulthard, G.S. (2014). Red skin, white masks: Rejecting the colonial politics of recognition. University of Minnesota Press.
  • Freeland, M.D. (2020). Aazheyaadizi: Worldview, language, and the logics of decolonization. Michigan State University Press.
  • Harjo, L. (2019). Spiral to the stars: Mvskoke tools of futurity. University of Arizona Press.
  • Jaimes, M.A. (ed.). (1992). The state of Native America: Genocide, colonization, and resistance. Race and Resistance. Boston: South End.
  • Kauanui, J.K. (2008). Hawaiian blood: Colonialism and the politics of sovereignty and Indigeneity. Narrating Native Histories. Duke University Press.
  • Lee, L.L. (Ed.). (2014). Diné perspectives: Revitalizing and reclaiming Navajo thought. University of Arizona Press.
  • Moreno, S. (2019). Love as resistance: Exploring conceptualizations of decolonial love in settler states. Girlhood Studies, 12(3), 116-133. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/ghs.2019.120310
  • Morgensen, S.L. (2011). The biopolitics of settler colonialism: Right here, right now. In Special Issue: A Global Phenomenon. Settler Colonial Studies, 1(1), 52–76.
  • Morgensen, S.L. (2011). Spaces between us: Queer settler colonialism and Indigenous decolonization. University of Minnesota Press.
  • Mucina, D.D. (2019). Ubuntu relational love: Decolonizing Black masculinities. University of Manitoba Press.
  • Rifkin, M. (2012). The erotics of sovereignty: Queer Native writing in the era of self-determination. University of Minnesota Press.
  • Silva, N.K. (2004). Aloha betrayed: Native Hawaiian resistance to American colonialism. American Encounters/Global Interactions. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • Simpson, A. (2007). On ethnographic refusal: Indigeneity, ‘voice’ and colonial citizenship.” Junctures 9, 67–80.
  • Simpson, A. (2014). Mohawk interruptus: Political life across the borders of settler states. Duke University Press.
  • Trask, H-K. (1999). From a Native daughter: Colonialism and sovereignty in Hawai‘i. Rev. ed. Latitude 20 Books. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press.

Indigenous Peoples of South America

  • Ari, W. (2014). Earth politics: Religion, decolonization, and Bolivia’s Indigenous intellectuals. Duke University Press.
  • Rivera Cusicanqui, S. (2020). Ch’ixinakax utxiwa: On decolonising practices and discourses. Polity.
  • Schiwy, F. (2009). Indianizing film: Decolonization, the Andes, and the question of technology. Rutgers University Press.