Review:
'This book makes a significant contribution to the study of Israeli occupation and its economic, social and political implications in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The multi-disciplinary group of contributors, including anthropologists, economists, geographers and political scientists, critically analyse and theoretically conceptualize the geopolitical conditions in the West Bank and Gaza over the past two decades, highlighting the colonial nature of Israeli politics on one hand and the Palestinian response to it on the other. This carefully-edited volume, which has great relevance to the current events in Israel\Palestine, is an important, detailed study which will serve scholars, students and those who are interested in the politics of the region.' Haim Yacobi, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel 'Through an interdisciplinary approach, the authors of this thought-provoking book contribute to counter the usual stereotypes about the wall in Palestine/Israel and unveil the multiplicity of surveillance mechanisms at work in the Occupied Territories. Besides being a welcome addition to the knowledge on new forms of borders, the book sheds light on two societies forged together by the logic of the military occupation.' Riccardo Bocco, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies - IHEID, Switzerland 'The critical perspectives found in this timely volume reveal the Wall as a central element in an emergent reality marked by complex forms of control, social relations, territoriality, violence, and governmentality. The book's conceptual sophistication is matched by its careful attention to the diverse experiences of local actors for whom life, work, and politics are inseparable from the Wall's considerable reverberations.' John Collins, St. Lawrence University, USA This book questions the dominant narratives of occupation, showing how asymmetrical interdependence works. The approach opens new perspectives for all those, in the academic or in the political sphere, who look for ways of understanding the changing patterns of control of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories and the changing responses by local actors.' Rachad Antonius, Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Canada 'To consider the Israeli occupation regime as "indeterminate" because it is "transformative" is to focus on the occupation as a control system rather than on its legal status. This collective work is innovative and theoretically insightful by emphasizing the complexity and dynamics of the control system where the Wall is its centerpiece, but also by drawing attention to the internationalization of the conflict where legalization is one of its aspects.' Joni Aasi, UNESCO Chair/Najah University, Palestine
About the Author:
Stéphanie Latte Abdallah is a research fellow at the French Institute of the Near East (IFPO), CNRS, Palestinian Territories. Cédric Parizot is a research fellow at the Institute of Research and Studies of the Arabo-Muslim World (IREMAM), CNRS/Aix-Marseille University, Aix en Provence, France.
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