Enacting Settler Responsibilities Towards Decolonisation

Ethnicities, 22(5), 605–618. https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968211062675

The University of Auckland Business School Research Paper Series

Posted: 21 Jan 2022 Last revised: 5 Oct 2022

See all articles by Avril Bell

Avril Bell

University of Auckland

Rose Mandica Yukich

University of Auckland

Billie Jane Lythberg

University of Auckland Business School

Christine Woods

University of Auckland

Date Written: 2021

Abstract

This special issue showcases research exploring the work of settler individuals and groups in support of projects of decolonisation in Aotearoa New Zealand, Australia, Canada and Israel. The papers gathered here were developed from presentations at an international symposium held in Auckland, New Zealand and online in February 2021. As symposium organisers and editors of this collection, we speak and write as settler subjects ourselves, and this collection is situated within the field of Settler Colonial Studies (SCS). This editorial provides an opening framing of the field into which these papers speak, and a survey of some of the key themes within the wider literature. We aim firstly to locate this work within the wider field of scholarship and activism on decolonisation and decoloniality, delimiting the particular focus of decolonisation within settler-dominated contexts. We then discuss the critiques that have been mounted against SCS and some important defences of the field. We argue that while settler colonialism persists, work in SCS has a contribution to make – in highlighting and critiquing settler logics and in identifying changes that it is within the power of settler peoples themselves to make as a contribution towards Indigenous-led decolonisation. Further, we argue that decolonising settler societies must involve settlers learning to be ‘in relation’ with Indigenous worlds and people outside of deeply habituated logics and practices of domination. The papers gathered here provide examples of settler subjects at various points on the path of decolonising themselves and learning the work of ‘being in relation’. Full paper available at https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968211062675.

Keywords: Decolonisation, indigenous-settler relation, responsibility, settler colonial studies, relationality

Suggested Citation

Bell, Avril and Yukich, Rose Mandica and Lythberg, Billie Jane and Woods, Christine, Enacting Settler Responsibilities Towards Decolonisation ( 2021). Ethnicities, 22(5), 605–618. https://doi.org/10.1177/14687968211062675, The University of Auckland Business School Research Paper Series, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4013322

Avril Bell (Contact Author)

University of Auckland ( email )

Sir Owen G Glenn Building, 12 Grafton Road, Auckla
Auckland, 1010

Rose Mandica Yukich

University of Auckland ( email )

Sir Owen G Glenn Building, 12 Grafton Road, Auckla
Auckland, 1010

Billie Jane Lythberg

University of Auckland Business School ( email )

12 Grafton Rd
Private Bag 92019
Auckland, 1010
New Zealand

Christine Woods

University of Auckland ( email )

Private Bag 92019
Com. A, room: 108
Auckland
New Zealand
64-9-373-7599 extn: 7594 (Phone)

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