28 research outputs found

    Paralysis over Palestine: Questions of Strategy

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    This essay by a prominent Israeli activist grows out of concern that advocacy efforts in support of the Palestinian cause have remained stuck at the protest-informational stage of combating disparate manifestations of the occupation. What is needed, the author argues, is a strategy to mobilize the vast range of civil society groups -- Palestinian, Israeli, and international -- to forge an effective lobbying and advocacy force that can lend the Palestinian leadership public support and a measure of parity with Israel. Intended as a starting point for debate, the essay explores the possibilities of a "middle range" strategy that would articulate the essential "red line" elements crucial to any just and sustainable settlement, provide a coordinated strategy of advocacy, and explore a range of "endgames," including a regional approach to resolving the conflict if the "two-state solution" is found to be impossible because of irreversible "facts on the ground.

    Resilience, resistance, infrapolitics and enmeshment

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    A great deal has been written in the International Relations literature about the role of resilience in our social world. One of the central debates in the scholarship concerns the relationship between resilience and resistance, which several scholars consider to be one of mutual exclusivity. For many theorists, an individual or a society can either be resilient or resistant, but not both. In this article, we argue that this understanding of the resilience–resistance connection suffers from three interrelated problems: it treats resilience and resistance as binary concepts rather than processes; it presents a simplistic conception of resilient subjects as apolitical subjects; and it eschews the ‘transformability’ aspect of resilience. In a bid to resolve these issues, the article advocates for the usefulness of a relational approach to the processes of resilience and resistance, and suggests an approach that understands resilience and resistance as engaged in mutual assistance rather than mutual exclusion. The case of the Palestinian national liberation movement illustrates our set of arguments

    The message of the bulldozers

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    House demolitions reflect the refusal of Israel toacknowledge that there is another people living in thecountry with legitimate claims and rights of their ow

    The Problem with Israel

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    Decolonizing Israel, Liberating Palestine

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    An Israeli in Palestine

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    Between Redemption and Revival

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    Between Practicing and Engaged Anthropology in Israel

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    Whether or not Israeli anthropologists choose to respond, the overbearing political and social situation of the country certainly places pressures on them to become "engaged" in one way or another in issues and events beyond the purely professional. The Anthropological Association of Israel, which numbers around one hundred in all its various subdisciplines, has passed and publicized resolutions on a variety of political concerns, from supporting Bedouin claims to land, to calling for more culturally sensitive policies of immigrant "absorption," to assailing the government's actions during the Palestinian Intifada.</jats:p
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