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Examining the Doctrine of Discovery in Religion and Indigenous Studies

Adam DJ Brett Syracuse University

Adam DJ Brett
Syracuse University

Betty Hill (Lyons) American Indian Law Alliance

Betty Hill (Lyons)
American Indian Law Alliance

Permalink: https://doi.org/10.1111/rec3.70039

Abstract

Since the publication of Pagans in the Promised Land by Steven T. Newcomb (Shawnee/Lenape), scholarship on the Doctrine of Discovery has expanded significantly as a central issue in Indigenous law and politics. However, its implications remain underexamined in Religious Studies, Indigenous Studies, and legal scholarship. This article analyzes the matrix of enslavement, exploitation, and extraction that Newcomb identifies within settler-colonial systems and examines how scholars in Religious Studies, Legal Studies, and Indigenous Studies have engaged with the Doctrine of Discovery. Situating the Doctrine of Discovery within the broader analytical frameworks of enslavement, systemic violence, and religious imperialism reveals its deep entanglement with historic and legal structures of oppression. Examining its intersections with Religious Studies and postcolonial scholarship uncover how white Christian hegemony maintains its dominion and exposes the fragility of any perceived boundary between church and state.


Abstract

Since the publication of Pagans in the Promised Land by Steven T. Newcomb (Shawnee/Lenape), scholarship on the Doctrine of Discovery has expanded significantly as a central issue in Indigenous law and politics. However, its implications remain underexamined in Religious Studies, Indigenous Studies, and legal scholarship. This article analyzes the matrix of enslavement, exploitation, and extraction that Newcomb identifies within settler-colonial systems and examines how scholars in Religious Studies, Legal Studies, and Indigenous Studies have engaged with the Doctrine of Discovery. Situating the Doctrine of Discovery within the broader analytical frameworks of enslavement, systemic violence, and religious imperialism reveals its deep entanglement with historic and legal structures of oppression. Examining its intersections with Religious Studies and postcolonial scholarship uncover how white Christian hegemony maintains its dominion and exposes the fragility of any perceived boundary between church and state.

Citation

Brett, Adam D. J., and Betty Hill. 2026. “Examining the Doctrine of Discovery in Religion and Indigenous Studies,” Religion Compass: e70039. https://doi.org/10.1111/rec3.70039.

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Examining the Doctrine of Discovery in Religion and Indigenous Studies

Published : 31 December 2025

How to Cite
Brett, Adam D. J., and Betty Hill. 2026. “Examining the Doctrine of Discovery in Religion and Indigenous Studies,” Religion Compass: e70039.
https://doi.org/10.1111/rec3.70039