•  491
    Moral challenges of mining Indigenous land for the green transition.
    AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples 21 (3): 591-602. 2025.
    Philosopher Kyle Whyte details what he refers to as crisis epistemology, whereby a state of crisis justifies otherwise ethically and politically unjustifiable action. This article examines how climate change is deployed as a justification to disregard Indigenous political sovereignty in the case of the Sámi (the Indigenous people who reside across four nation-state borders of Norway, Sweden, Finland, and the Kola peninsula, Russia) land of Kiruna, Sweden, including their battles with the Swedish…Read more
  •  848
    My focus in this philosophy paper is rocks. When I say rocks, I mean the solid mineral material that forms parts of the earth’s surface, otherwise known as pebbles, boulders, or a mountain range. Specifically, my aim in this paper is to detail the kinds of moral responsibilities that humans have toward rocks within an ethical framework of Indigenous Kinship Ethics. This responsibility is complex and contextual–like all moral responsibility–but complexity is not a compelling argument to dismiss e…Read more
  •  598
    The 1970s Wages Against Housework (WAH) movement has much to offer as we form a “new normal” for life and work within the Covid-19 pandemic. WAH feminist philosophers Mariarosa Dalla Costa, Selma James, and Silvia Federici, as well as WAH critic Angela Davis outline the ways in which the housewife functions as a laborer within capitalist accumulation, as her duties to care for the home and rear the children generate the possibility of the husband to labor outside the home. This role of the house…Read more
  •  67
    In this paper, I use Gloria Anzaldúa’s narrative method of “autohistoría” in concert with theoretical analysis to reflect on my experiences as a queer teacher in the heteronormative United States schooling system. These reflections are aimed at unpacking the ways in which racialization, sexual orientation and coloniality are inseparably tied to living out one’s gender. It is this phenomenon of “Gender-as-Lived” that I urge become a focus of identity development research in education studies and …Read more