“…The field of settler colonial studies investigates the replacement of an indigenous population with an exogenous one on the land as a category analytically distinct from colonialism, which involves domination from afar (Veracini, ; Wolfe, , ). The centrality of land, territory, and sovereignty within settler colonial studies partially explains why geographers and other scholars, particularly in political ecology and indigenous studies, have found this literature increasingly fruitful in their research agendas (e.g., Alatout, , ; Cattelino, , ; Curley, , ; Day, ; Farrales, ; Fix, ; Getzoff, ; Kirk, ; Kauanui, ; Pasternak, , ; Pulido, ; A. Simpson, ; Shoffner, ; Smiles, ; Tomiak, )—albeit not without challenging some of its premises and disciplinary dominance relative to indigenous studies (Snelgrove, Dhamoon, & Corntassel, ). Until fairly recently, however, political geographers have been reticent to fully take up the settler colonial framework, often avoiding explicit reference to the settler colonial designation in researching these polities (see Bhungalia, , p. 314).…”