
New Books Network Cassandra Shepard, "Settler Colonialism is the Disaster: A Critique of New Orleans After Hurricane Katrina and During the COVID-19 Pandemic" (U Illinois Press, 2026)
Feb 15, 2026
Cassandra Shepard, Assistant Professor of African American and Diaspora Studies and author of Settler Colonialism is the Disaster, offers scholarly research on New Orleans, Katrina, and COVID-19. She traces settler colonialism through disaster capitalism and tourism-driven reconstruction. She weaves lived stories, policing and carceral expansion, cultural spectacle, and possibilities for decolonial rebuilding.
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Origins: Katrina, Colonization, And COVID Framed Together
- Shepard developed the book from long-term research in the Lower Ninth Ward and graduate studies that linked Katrina to colonial frameworks.
- She integrates post-Katrina, post-colonial, and post-COVID as metaphors to show ongoing structures, not finished moments.
Disaster Capitalism Through A Settler Colonial Lens
- Shepard builds on Naomi Klein's disaster capitalism but centers settler colonialism as the core structure shaping disaster responses.
- She terms the phenomenon 'settler colonial disaster' to capture plantation, capital, and colonial dynamics working together.
What Settler Colonialism Actually Means
- Settler colonialism is a structure where settlers 'come to stay,' collapse geographies, establish sovereignty, and replace Native peoples.
- Shepard emphasizes ongoing sovereignty formation, racialized borders, and replacement leading to genocide and dispossession.



