Cover
Contents
Introduction: Settler City Limits
Part One: Life and Death
Chapter One: "Welcome to Winnipeg": Making Settler Colonial Urban Space in "Canada's Most Racist City"
Chapter Two: Anti-Indian Common Sense: Border Town Violence and Resistance in Mni Luzahan
Chapter Three: Comparative Settler Colonial Urbanisms: Racism and the Making of Inner-City Winnipeg and Minneapolis, 1940–1975
Part Two: Land and Politics
Chapter Four: Contested Entitlement: The Kapyong Barracks, Treaty Rights, and Settler Colonialism in Winnipeg
Chapter Five: Experiments in Regional Settler Colonization: Pursuing Justice and Producing Scale through the Montana Study
Chapter Six: Urban Métis Communities: The Politics of Recognition, Reflexivity, and Relationality
Part Three: Policing and Social Control
Chapter Seven: Policing Racialized Spaces
Chapter Eight: Care-to-Prison Pipeline: Indigenous Children in Twenty-First-Century Settler Colonial Economies
Chapter Nine: "I Claim in the Name Of. . ." Indigenous Street Gangs and Politics of Recognition in Prairie Cities
Part Four: Contestation, Resistance, Solidarity
Chapter Ten: Talisi through the Lens: Locating Native Tulsa in the Films of Sterlin Harjo
Chapter Eleven: Little Partitions on the Prairies: Muslim Identity and Settler Colonialism in Saskatchewan
Chapter Twelve: Decolonizing Prairie Public Art: The Further Adventures of the Ness Namew
Bibliography
Contributors
Index