ABSTRACT

Exploring the way urbicide is used to un/re-make Palestine, as well as how it is employed as a tool of spatial dispossession and control, this book examines contemporary political violence and destruction in the context of colonial projects in Palestine.

The broader framework of the book is colonial and post- urban destruction urbanism; with a working hypothesis that there are links, gaps and blind spots in the understanding of urbicide discourse. Drawing on several examples from the Palestinian history of destruction and transformations, such as; Jenin Refugee Camp, Hebron Old Town, and Nablus Old Town, a methodological framework to identify urbicidal episodes is also generated.

Advancing knowledge on one historical moment of the urban condition, the moment of its destruction, and enhancing the understanding of the Palestinian Israeli conflict from urbanistic/ architectonic and Urbicide / Spacio-cide perspectives through the use of case studies, this book will be essential reading for scholars and researchers with an interest in Urban Geography and Middle East Politics more broadly.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Experiencing spaces of oppression and resistance

part I|37 pages

City, war and urbicide

chapter 1|17 pages

Cities and war

chapter 2|18 pages

Urbicide

Theoretical inquiry

part II|145 pages

Urbicide in Palestine

chapter 4|13 pages

Nablus

Historical perspective

chapter 5|45 pages

Nablus

A city of heritage

chapter 6|47 pages

Urbicide in Nablus 2002–2005

part III|42 pages

Revision

chapter 7|22 pages

Urbicide, states of exception and beyond

chapter 8|18 pages

Palestinian resistance discourse