From overt to veiled segregation: Israel's Palestinian Arab citizens in the Galilee

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Abstract

This article's geographical focus is the Galilee, Israel's only region with a Palestinian Arab majority. Its sociological focus is the drive to Judaize this region, the mirror image of its de-Arabization, which I anchor in Israelis' morbid fear of settler colonial reversal. Although direct legal discrimination-restriction of movement under a military government and exclusion from publicly administered land-was banned by the government and the High Court of Justice respectively, new modes of discrimination against Israel's Arab citizens have replaced the older forms. I demonstrate how policies that limit Arab middle-class citizens' upwardly mobile migration into the Judaized spaces of communal settlements (or overlooks) and towns endure. I compare gate-keeping exercised by national-level indirect legal discrimination operating through the admission committees of communal settlements with the institutional discrimination practiced by municipalities of emerging mixed towns against new Arab residents' public presence. Finally, I highlight the linkages between instances of Judaization across the Green Line, which make the unwinding of segregation, in all of its forms, that much harder.

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APA

Shafir, G. (2018, February 1). From overt to veiled segregation: Israel’s Palestinian Arab citizens in the Galilee. International Journal of Middle East Studies. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020743817000915

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