Kiran Asher, Penelope Anthias, and I have been collaborating over the past several years to cultivate a conversation with several other scholars that critically questions the relationships among N/nature and anti- and de-colonial approaches across the world. The result is a special issue titled “Querying Nature and (Anti-/De-)coloniality” that has just been published in the journal Antipode. See below for links to each article!

See below for a full list of the contributing authors and their articles, many of which are open access:
- “Querying Nature and (Anti-/De-)coloniality: Introduction to the Symposium” by Penelope Anthias, Joel E. Correia, and Kiran Asher
- “Bending Possession: How Detroiters Care for Land by Remediating Settler Property” by Nicholas Caverly
- “When Broken Worlds Churn: The Anti-Caste Fabulations of Du Saraswathi” by Shreyas Sreenath
- “Iran as Subaltern Empire: Lake Orumiyeh, Environmental Injustice, and Coloniality in Iranian Azerbaijan” by A. Marie Ranjbar
- “Indigenous Natures and the Anthropocene: Racial Capitalism, Violent Materialities, and the Colonial Politics of Representation” by Penelope Anthias and Kiran Asher
- “From Colonial Natures to Entangled Ecologies: Making Due and Relational Geographies of Indigenous Resurgence in the Chaco” by Joel E. Correia and Clemente Dermott
- “‘Inhabiting Otherwise’: Maasai Pastoralists’ Ontological Struggles Over Land in Tanzania” by Leiyo Singo

