Andrew Curley

Title

Andrew Curley

Birthplace

United States of America (Navajo Nation)

Primary Sources

Curley, A., Gupta, P., Lookabaugh, L., Neubert, C., & Smith, S. (2022). Decolonisation is a political project: Overcoming impasses between Indigenous sovereignty and abolition. Antipode, 54(4), 1043-1062. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/anti.12830

Curley, A. (2021). Dependency Theory and Indigenous Politics. The SAGE Handbook of Marxism, 1150-1166.

Curley, A. (2021). Infrastructures as colonial beachheads: The Central Arizona Project and the taking of Navajo resources. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 39(3), 387-404. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0263775821991537

Curley, A. (2021). Livestock, Colonialism, and Commodity Frontiers in the US Southwest. Commodity Frontiers, (3), 27-30.

Curley, A. (2021). Resources is just another word for colonialism. In The Routledge handbook of critical resource geography (pp. 79-90). Routledge.

Curley, A. (2021). Unsettling Indian water settlements: The little Colorado river, the San Juan River, and colonial enclosures. Antipode, 53(3), 705-723. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/anti.12535

Curley, A., & Smith, S. (2020). Against colonial grounds: Geography on Indigenous lands. Dialogues in Human Geography, 10(1), 37-40. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/2043820619898900

Curley, A., & Lister, M. (2020). Already existing dystopias: Tribal sovereignty, extraction, and decolonizing the Anthropocene. Handbook on the changing geographies of the state, 251-262.

Curley, A. (2019). “Our Winters’ rights”: Challenging colonial water laws. Global Environmental Politics, 19(3), 57-76.

Curley, A. (2018). A failed green future: Navajo green jobs and energy “transition” in the Navajo Nation. Geoforum, 88, 57-65.

Curley, A. (2014). The Origin of Legibility: Rethinking Colonialism and Resistance among the Navajo People, 1868-1937. Diné perspectives: Revitalizing and reclaiming Navajo thought, 129-50.

Secondary Sources

Gergan, M. D., & Curley, A. (2023). Indigenous youth and decolonial futures: energy and environmentalism among the Diné in the Navajo Nation and the Lepchas of Sikkim, India. Antipode, 55(3), 749-769. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/anti.12763

Gergan, M., Krishnan, S., Smith, S., & Young, S. (2023). Youth and Decolonial Politics in a Relational Context. Antipode, 55(3), 671-686. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/anti.12906

Wilson, N. J., Montoya, T., Arseneault, R., & Curley, A. (2021). Governing water insecurity: Navigating indigenous water rights and regulatory politics in settler colonial states. Water International, 46(6), 783-801. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02508060.2021.1928972

Powell, D. E., & Curley, A. (2008). K’e, Hozhó, and non-governmental politics on the Navajo Nation: Ontologies of difference manifest in Environmental Activism. Anthropological Quarterly, 81, 17-58.

Extra Resources

Dr. Andrew Curley website. Accessed November 20, 2023. https://www.geography2050.org/speaker-library-2021/dr-andrew-curley

D'Cruze, N. (2023, October 30). Guest speaker Andrew Curley explores Native relationships with carbon sovereignty in book talk. North by Northwestern. Accessed November 20, 2023. https://northbynorthwestern.com/guest-speaker-andrew-curley-explores/

‘Environmental Justice & Indigenous Rights | Andrew Curley: What Is A RESOURCE CURSE?’ (2020, February 8). Duke Franklin Humanities Institute. Youtube. Accessed November 21, 2023. https://youtu.be/bzzIshFvDvE

Citation

“Andrew Curley,” Decoloniality, First Nations Thinkers and thought and practices from the Global South, accessed September 12, 2024, https://omeka.cloud.unimelb.edu.au/decoloniality-and-thinkers-from-the-global-south/items/show/659.

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