Settler Colonialism as a Structure?
This collection of papers originates from a June 2024 workshop at the Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome (KNIR) as part of the Settler Colonial Paradigms research program. Scholars from the Research Centre for Historical Studies at University of Groningen, explore settler colonialism across different time periods, from the ancient Mediterranean to future visions of Mars colonization, analysing its core characteristics and lasting impact. The contributors examine overlooked perspectives and raise important questions: What defines settler colonialism across time and space? How does it differ from other colonial forms? And how can this concept enhance our understanding of contemporary global dynamics? To foster further dialogue and advance the discourse, external experts in the field have been invited to provide responses.
Settler Colonialism as a Structure? Reflections on Settler Colonial Discourse and Expert Responses
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Introduction
Jeremia Pelgrom & Clemens Six -
The Ancient Roots of Settler Colonialism
Jeremia Pelgrom -
Caesar’s World Turned Inside Out? Roman Provincial Colonisation and the ‘Settler Revolution’ of the First Century BCE
Jitse Daniels -
Reason of State Literature in Dutch Colonial Practice: Pieter van Hoorn in Batavia
Dinah Wouters -
When Does a Settler Become an Ancient Settler?
Mark L. Thompson -
Plantations in the Peatlands? Domestic Colonization and Settlement in the Nineteenth-Century Dutch North
Maarten Zwiers -
Contested ‘Modernities’, Unaccepted Intermediaries? In Between-men in Settler Colonial Settings from the Levant
Karène Sanchez Summerer

