settlerist

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

settler +‎ -ist

Adjective[edit]

settlerist (comparative more settlerist, superlative most settlerist)

  1. Characteristic of or pertaining to settlerism.
    1. Promoting emigration as a settler.
      • 2011, James Belich, Replenishing the Earth: The Settler Revolution and the Rise of the Angloworld, →ISBN:
        Souther California was 'perfect bliss on earth', an 'Earthly Eden unsurpassed', 'A Southern California Paradise'. Another old settlerist nerve struck by California boosters was the availability of a life as well as a living, leisure as well as wealth.
      • 2012, Julie McIntyre, First Vintage: Wine in colonial New South Wales, →ISBN:
        Settlerist principles meant the Australian colonies believed Britain had an obligation to buy colonial wine.
      • 2013 May, Jeffry Babb, “Explaining the success of the 'Anglo-world' [Book Review]”, in Institute of Public Affairs Review: A Quarterly Review of Politics and Public Affairs, volume 65, number 1:
        The British 'Wests' consists of those societies which mirror the settlerist characteristics of the American West, such as Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
    2. Asserting the rights and privileges of settlers over others (such as indigenous people).
      • 2002, Media Professionalism and Ethics in Zimbabwe:
        So this period saw a gradual polarisation with the settlerist position consolidating itself against the liberal interventionist camp and the African majority.
      • 2012, Pius Adesanmi, You're Not a Country, Africa, →ISBN:
        In d'Allemagne's vitriolic prose, Québec bears an incredible resemblance to Kenya, Rhodesia, and South Africa under white 'settlerist plunder and dispossession.
      • 2016, Marcelo Svirsky, Arab-Jewish Activism in Israel-Palestine, →ISBN:
        In modern times, our colonial present burst forth in Palestine in the early twentieth century as an evolving settlerist project led by the Zionist movement which had to interlace its statist aspirations, first with Ottoman imperialism and then with the British, eventually supplanting them with a specific variety of internal settler colonialism.
      • 2016, Hisham Ramadan, Jeff Shantz, Manufacturing Phobias, →ISBN:
        Further studies might pursue specifically settlerist forms of phobic construction within settler societies like Canada and the United States.

Noun[edit]

settlerist (plural settlerists)

  1. One who promotes or believes in settlerism.
    • 1987, Dissertation Abstracts International: The humanities and social sciences, page 461:
      ...this study demonstrates no only that relations of western domination against African militancy shape the activities and goals of otherwise unique liberal agencies, but also that the programs actually benefit western domination while retarding African liberation more effectively than those of the settlerists or the right-wing in general.
    • 2007, Femi James Kolapo, Kwabena O. Akurang-Parry, African Agency and European Colonialism, →ISBN:
      Nor was the rivalry and the differences between the various European powers, and between British imperialists and the Boer settlerists respecting colonial strategies, interest served, and goals aimed at to be minimized.
    • 2014, Marcelo Svirsky, “The collaborative struggle and the permeability of settler colonialism”, in Settler Colonial Studies, volume 4, number 4:
      Barghouti's support of those 'principled anti-colonial Jewish Israelis' as he put it, need to be read as an open invitation for settlerists to put behind their commitment to settlerism.

Anagrams[edit]