Predators and Pests

Environmental Ethics 42 (4):295-311 (2020)
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Abstract

The tethering of Indigenous peoples to animality has long been a central mechanism of settler colonialism. Focusing on North America from the seventeenth century to the pres­ent, this essay argues that Indigenous animalization stems from the settler imposition onto Native Americans of dualistic notions of human/animal difference, coupled with the settler view that full humanity hinges on the proper cultivation of land. To further illustrate these claims, we attend to how Native Americans have been and continue to be animalized as both predators and pests, and show how these modes of animalization have and continue to provide settlers motive and justification for the elimination of Native peoples and the extractive domination of Native lands.

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Animal Property Rights as a Decolonial Project.Antoni Mikocki - 2024 - Journal of Animal Ethics 14 (2):208-220.

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