ABSTRACT

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict gravitates constantly around the question of territorial control due to the settler-colonial principle present at the core of the Zionist project. Acknowledging space as a central tool of domination used by the Israeli authorities, this volume sheds light on the way space can become both a resource for and an outcome of protest, with an emphasis placed on the way it is used and produced through practices of resistance by subaltern groups.

The research relies on a comparative approach, relying on data collected in the course of fieldwork conducted between 2012 and 2015 in Palestine and Israel. It focuses on three "sites of contention", which include the H2 area in Hebron (the occupied Old City, under Israeli authority), the "core" neighbourhoods of Silwan (Wadi Hilwe and al-Bustan) and the unrecognized Bedouin village of al-Araqib, in the Negev desert. Through these three case studies, the book tackles different strategies that engage with the materiality of space, place, sense of place, territory, landscape, network and scale, showing the mobilization of a real "spatial repertoire" of contention. The different regimes of control give rise to strategies that are first and foremost emplaced, i.e. rooted in the local.

Providing an original comparison between flashpoints of the Palestinian resistance against the Israeli politics of dispossession and expulsion, the book is a key resource for scholars and readers interested in political geography, political science, sociology, and the Israel-Palestine conflict.

chapter |33 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|40 pages

Three sites of contention

Al-Araqib, Silwan, Hebron

chapter 2|41 pages

Inhabiting

The value of presence and the right to place

chapter 3|40 pages

Planning

Conceiving and building space: a power game

chapter 4|24 pages

Protesting

Disrupting hegemony in the public space and sphere

chapter 5|55 pages

Sanctifying

Producing a sacred geography

chapter 6|54 pages

Globalizing

International networks of solidarity and advocacy

chapter |14 pages

Conclusion: emplaced territorialization