Public spaces in the occupied Palestinian territories
Publication Type
Original research
Authors
Most research on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict has focused on macro and meso-levels of abstraction by exploring national territorial and urban scales. This article, however, takes a more micro-level approach by investigating one specific public space in detail. It analyses the transformation and use of Dawar, the main public space of the city of Nablus, during the First (1987–1993) and Second (2000–2005) Intifadas. Public spaces in Palestinian cities have been transformed during the two Intifadas on both the physical and the socio-economic levels. Changing power relations affect the way ublic spaces are produced and regulated. Citizens, too, (re)produce public spaces through everyday practices, uses, and— in our case—explicit forms of resistance. The study proposes an analytical framework to look at public spaces as the result of power relations by combining the work of two French theorists, Michel Foucault and Henri Lefebvre. This framework is then applied to Dawar during the two Intifadas
Journal
Title
GeoJournal
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Publisher Country
Netherlands
Publication Type
Both (Printed and Online)
Volume
78
Year
2012
Pages
743-758