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Law, Violence and Sovereignty Among West Bank Palestinians
This book explores the continuing legacy of the Peace Process in the everyday life of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Tobias Kelly (Author)
9780521868068, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 14 December 2006
218 pages, 10 b/w illus. 1 map
23.4 x 15.1 x 1.7 cm, 0.491 kg
'… Kelly's book is rich, innovative and well grounded. … the author shows beautifully how the reality of territorial integration, economic dependence and legal fragmentation has created a situation in which collective rights and the solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict altogether, needs to be redefined.' American Ethnologist
As the Oslo Peace Process has given way to the violence of the second intifada, this book explores the continuing legacy of Oslo in the everyday life of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Taking a perspective that sees the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a conflict over the distribution of legal rights, it focuses on the daily concerns of West Bank Palestinians, and explores the meanings, limitations and potential of legal claims in the context of the region's structures of governance. Kelly argues that fundamental contradictions in the process through which the West Bank has been ruled and misruled have resulted in an unstable mixture of legality, fear and uncertainty. Based on long term ethnographic fieldwork, this book provides an insight into how the wider Middle East conflict manifests itself through the daily encounters of ordinary Israelis and Palestinians, offering an evocative and theoretically informed account of the relationship between law, peace-building and violence.
1. Introduction
2. Understanding rights claims
3. 'Jurisdictional politics' in the occupied West Bank
4. West Bank Palestinians across the green line
5. Claiming labour rights in the West Bank
6. The Palestinian National Authority and the 'National Interest'
7. Conclusion
Bibliography.
Subject Areas: International humanitarian law [LBBS], Human rights [JPVH], Middle Eastern history [HBJF1]
