Abstract
This article is a review of two recent ethnographies on Palestinians in the West Bank: Resistance, Repression, and Gender Politics in Occupied Palestine and Jordan, by Frances Hasso (2005), and Law, Violence and Sovereignty Among West Bank Palestinian by Tobias Kelly (2006). Hasso examines the significant and unique role of women in organizing the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine in the Occupied Territories, as compared to Jordan, while Kelly examines the jurisdictional and practical problems of labor disputes for male workers in a West Bank village. The two books exemplify how ethnographies of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories oscillate between documenting dispossession and empowerment.
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Bornstein, A. Dispossession and empowerment in the ethnography of Palestinians in the occupied territories. Dialect Anthropol 32, 341–351 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10624-009-9086-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10624-009-9086-9