From Expulsion to Self-Rule: The Zionist Quest to Bury Palestine Alive
Reviews 17 July, 2024

From Expulsion to Self-Rule: The Zionist Quest to Bury Palestine Alive

Tariq Dana

Assistant Professor in Conflict and Humanitarian Studies at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies. His research concerns the political economy, civil society, social movements, state building and economic development, and the relationship between the state and society, with a research focus on Palestine and the Arab world. Holds a PhD in Political Science from St. Anna's College of Advanced Studies, Italy.

ALI JARBAWI, From Expulsion to Self-Rule: The Zionist Quest to Bury Palestine Alive (Beirut: Arab Institute for Research & Publishing, 2023), pp. 517.

acrobat Icon Shaped by Zionist settler-colonialism, the field of Palestine studies has contributed unique concepts and insights to humanities and social sciences. This peculiar form of settler-colonialism has not only generated peculiar phenomena but also redefined existing ones, thereby challenging traditional scholarly paradigms and academic interpretations. For example, the application of the concept of “apartheid” in the Palestinian context, originally associated with the racial segregation system in South Africa, does not fully capture the severity and nature of the brutal domination of the Israeli segregation system over Palestinians, as highlighted by scholars and South African leaders alike. Similarly, while the term “genocide” has been invoked to describe the large-scale mass killing and destruction of Gaza by Israel, it does not sufficiently reflect the multilayered atrocities, including mass extermination, ethnic cleansing, collective punishment, starvation, and other war crimes taking place in Gaza simultaneously, unprecedented in their visibility and the brazenness of their execution. Adapting those terminologies into the Palestinian context deepens our understanding of the peculiarity of that context and pushes the boundaries of social sciences to accommodate such extraordinary realities.


*** This study was published in the 15th issue of AlMuntaqa, a peer-reviewed academic journal for the social sciences and humanities. You can read the full paper here.