Melissa Gatter, Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp: A Nine-to-Five Emergency (New Texts Out Now)

Melissa Gatter, Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp: A Nine-to-Five Emergency (New Texts Out Now)

Melissa Gatter, Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp: A Nine-to-Five Emergency (New Texts Out Now)

By : Melissa Gatter

Melissa Gatter, Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp: A Nine-to-Five Emergency (American University in Cairo Press, 2023).

Jadaliyya (J): What made you write this book? 

Melissa Gatter (MG): Time and Power in Azraq Refugee Camp has been born and reborn many times since 2016, when I was starting as a PhD student at the University of Cambridge. I came to my PhD with questions about time in refugee camp settings, prompted by my master’s research and humanitarian practitioner experience in Zaatari camp in Jordan. In Zaatari, I was interested in how children navigated humanitarian politics, but I was also left with curiosity about the temporal politics that camp residents daily engaged with and spoke about. I had observed that there was more to how the literature treats the supposed paradox of time in camps, that the only thing of temporal interest is that the camp is permanently temporary.

During my time in Zaatari, aid workers shared with me stories and rumors about Azraq, Jordan’s other official camp for Syrian refugees. Little had been published then on Azraq because it was virtually inaccessible to researchers and even journalists. When I did gain access to Azraq for my doctoral research, I knew I had stumbled upon a unique opportunity to bring attention to this understudied camp. My queries of time ultimately became an investigation into power, that of the aid regime and the Jordanian state, but also the residents themselves. What I witnessed in Azraq led me to write my dissertation, and then Time and Power, with a sense of urgency. It was the urgency that I felt was missing from Azraq’s management that I poured into this book.

Time and Power places the spatial and the temporal in conversation to paint a more complete picture of power in Azraq.

J: What particular topics, issues, and literatures does the book address?

MG: Where the literature on forced displacement and refugee camps has most often studied spatial power, leaving time to the background, Time and Power places the spatial and the temporal in conversation to paint a more complete picture of power in Azraq. It draws on anthropological and philosophical theories of time to situate the refugee camp within messy, intersecting, and contradictory temporalities and builds upon ethnographies of protracted settings of displacement (like Ilana Feldman’s Life Lived in Relief and Michel Agier’s Managing the Undesirables). The book approaches time in Azraq as being of analytical interest because those who live there have become conscious of it through their immobility, pointing to an existential relationship to time that concerned philosophers like Henri Bergson, Martin Heidegger, and Michel Foucault. It is this existential relation that grants time its political significance in precarious places like refugee camps, leading to the book’s central question: how does power function through time in Azraq?

Time and Power sets out to answer this question through an interdisciplinary examination of several key themes. Through an ethnographic investigation of aid workers’ narratives and daily routines, I explore how the emergency of the camp is everyday reproduced through bureaucratized aid, bridging the literature on bureaucracy (such as Michael Lipsky’s Street-Level Bureaucracy) and humanitarian response (including Liisa Malkki’s The Need to Help). My focus on everyday interactions between camp residents and aid workers also illuminates the temporal aspect of surveillance in Azraq, offering new perspectives on care-control dynamics and disciplinary power that anthropologists of migration have theorized through a spatial lens. I also explore how residents spend and talk about their time in Azraq, approaching waiting analytically as multilayered, building on the work of anthropologists who have challenged accounts of waiting in precarity as merely descriptive fact (like Shahram Khosravi’s Precarious Lives). Reflecting how residents wait and imagine multiple futures from within a securitized and bureaucratized context, I consider themes of hope and hopelessness through Lauren Berlant’s lens of cruel optimism.

Apart from its centering of time in camp studies, Time and Power also importantly contributes a critique of Azraq’s position within the aid world as the “model” refugee camp. When I was on fieldwork in 2017 and 2018, very few scholars had written about Azraq. One such scholar was Sophia Hoffmann, whose piece in Security Dialogue questioned whether Azraq could stand as an instance of humanitarianism. My book ultimately addresses this question and warns against the reproduction of Azraq’s blueprint in future cases of mass displacement.  

J: How does this book connect to and/or depart from your previous work?

MG: Time and Power builds on the ethnographic research I conducted in both Zaatari and Azraq for my master’s and PhD, but the process of writing the book led me even deeper into my initial investigations. The book expands significantly on the arguments featured in my earlier publications, in which I critique the lessons learned from Zaatari’s camp management and reveal the work Azraq does to control refugees behind its caring façade, as well as in blogscommentary, and panel discussions. Though not a central lens of my research, the gendered politics of displacement is still central to my ethnography, which foregrounds the experiences of women in the camp, and I have spoken about this in op-eds and podcasts. All of my previous work offers a sneak peek into the much fuller stories told in Time and Power.

It is important to acknowledge the global pandemic that took place between my PhD fieldwork and the publication of this book. The spatio-temporal oppression that many people, including myself, felt during the pandemic was already somewhat familiar to me because I had observed it in Azraq. I reflect on this in the book’s preface, and I hope this guides the reader to approach Time and Power from a more intimate understanding of the pain, anxiety, and uncertainty narrated in what follows. 

J: Who do you hope will read this book, and what sort of impact would you like it to have? 

MG: Time and Power is physically light, but it weighs heavy with stories that continue to play out beyond its pages. I feel a tremendous sense of responsibility to those whose lives formed the scaffolding for this book and with whom I remain in touch. It is a great privilege to be an academic, to have the time and space to explore big questions about power, isolation and connection, hope and optimism, and I hope that this book has even a small impact on those who impacted me. 

This book would be of particular interest to scholars of refugee camps, humanitarianism and development, time and space, waiting and agency, and the everyday in Jordan, the Arabic-speaking world, and beyond. I hope that Time and Power reaches students of all levels, as it is conversations with my students in the classroom that give me optimism about the direction of academic research, particularly in anthropology.

I wrote this book with development practitioners and policymakers in mind as a way of meaningfully contributing to the ongoing conversations around camps in the aid sector. I hope that Time and Power prompts those who work in development to have serious discussions about the social and political legacies of camps.

The kinds of conversations that Time and Power sparks should be had first and foremost with stakeholders in Jordan and neighboring countries, and I was excited to publish with American University in Cairo Press for its impressive reach to readers across the Arabic-speaking world.

J: What other projects are you working on now? 

MG: At the moment, I am working on an article on the concept of resilience, a word that tends to be thrown around in the development sector without much thought to its implications. Time and Power offers a brief look into resilience and resistance in the context of Azraq, but this article will take a more conceptual approach beyond the camp.

In the longer term, I hope to stay connected to Azraq. There is still so much to say about camps, especially when Azraq has been deemed to be the “model.” As the supposed future of camps, Azraq gives us a window into the direction the aid world is heading. I will also continue to study time. Time and Power has intentionally left room to explore camp legacies as they are crafted and as they endure through the present. My next project looks to explore the temporal politics of camp abolition through a postcolonial lens, taking seriously the question of what a world without camps would look like. 

J: Can you explain the book’s subtitle, what is a ‘nine-to-five emergency’? 

MG: The subtitle, A Nine-to-Five Emergency, refers to the aid regime’s treatment of time in Azraq. The “nine-to-five emergency” is a central concept of the book that I use to describe how bureaucratic proceduralism of aid in the camp undermines any sense of urgency and emergency. It captures the inherent contradiction of Azraq’s everyday in which camp residents struggle to meet their pressing basic needs, such as electricity and income generation, while aid workers approach their work as a routine nine-to-five job. The concept gets to the heart of the temporal power dynamics in Azraq, where the aid regime relies on the fact that “there is always tomorrow” but camp residents do not see “tomorrow” as a luxury. I hope that the “nine-to-five emergency” concept provides language for scholars to think about temporal power dynamics in other precarious settings.

 

Excerpt from the book (from the Introduction: Why Time?, pp. 1-4)

In a caravan some ninety kilometers south of the Syrian border, Fadwa knelt on her prayer mat. I chatted with her colleague, who, like Fadwa, lived in Village 3 and worked at the nongovernmental organization (NGO) center, where we had positioned ourselves directly under an air-conditioning unit. We spoke quietly, mindful of the children who were sleeping in this room that served as a nursery and of Fadwa, who at this moment was finishing her prayers. “As-salamu ‘alaykum, as-salamu ‘alaykum,” she whispered softly as she looked over each shoulder. She sat still a moment and then turned to join our conversation. 

“So what topic are you researching here in Azraq?” she asked excitedly, and I gave her the usual response, that generally I am interested in time, how it passes and how it is experienced by people who live and who work in the camp.

“There is no time in the camp [ma fi wa’t bil-mukhayyam]!” Fadwa responded. “Our schedules are so full, we are busy all the time.”

“It’s a good thing you are busy, no?” I asked, remembering how others in the camp loathed the idea of sitting at home in their caravan with nothing to do. 

“No, it’s not better!” both Fadwa and her colleague remarked in unison. Fadwa continued, “We feel pressure [daght] all the time, we don’t have time to rest, we don’t have time to give our minds a break [ma fi ‘andna wa’t mnurtah, ma fi wa’t mnurayyih balna].”

I would quickly come to realize from speaking with others like Fadwa just how loaded the concept of time is for Syrians living in Jordan’s Azraq camp. What did Fadwa mean when she stated that “there is no time in the camp”? She related “clock time”—for her, a daily schedule filled with work, chores, and childrearing—to an abstract concept of time that does not allow for a break from camp life. To say that “there is no time in the camp” not only conveys a sense of busyness in the everyday but could also portray a feeling of isolation from “outside” or “national” time. Time as Fadwa may have experienced it in her hometown of Quriyateyn, Homs, before the war does not exist within Azraq’s borders.

Several kilometers to the south in Village 5, Nour, a spirited Aleppan woman, directed an NGO center. Nour loved her job, where she was in charge of the residents employed at the center and oversaw NGO programming six days a week. She kept busy between work and home life, in which she and her husband were raising six children. Nour told me that she did not like to sit still and hated the thought of not having work to occupy her time: “If I didn’t have my job, I wouldn’t stay here one minute [law mani mushtaghleh ma badil dagigeh]!” At this time, she had been in Azraq for about two years, a period she likened to “a lifetime [‘umr].” Like Fadwa, Nour had a full schedule and had also grown tired of the camp environment; every few months it seemed she renewed her vow to leave the camp, declaring, “That’s it, I’m tired of the camp [khalas ta‘ibit min al-mukhayyam]!” 

Nour expressed a sense of urgency, not wanting to waste one more “minute” in Azraq if she did not have the opportunity to work because she felt that the camp had already deprived her of a “lifetime.” Her experience was one of busyness juxtaposed to an uncertain duration of time that Fadwa and her colleague lamented in the discussion quoted earlier. Nour and Fadwa both demonstrated that time in the refugee camp is end- less and unwanted. While perhaps filled from day to day, Azraq time is also in abundance—there is too much of it—and neither woman has the ability to break from this time conundrum. In both cases, the abundance of time is not a luxury, but an experience of exhausting endurance. To desire a break from camp life is a wish for freedom not only from temporal confines but also from physical ones—that is, to be outside the camp’s borders. Azraq is separated from Jordanian civilization by thirty-five kilometers on either side—again, the abundance of space is not a luxury but a symbol of isolation, as a factsheet of the humanitarian agency CARE identified the camp’s location as precisely “in the middle of the desert” (CARE 2015). 

There is a sense among Azraq’s residents that the time they desire— one in which future life trajectories are attainable and remain intact—is slipping away, that the future has been lost even before it has come. Many felt that the future had already “passed us by [rah ‘alayna].” Azraq is the kind of place with simple childbearing facilities and a cemetery, but not much for the life that happens in between. 

This book seeks to foreground time in Azraq camp. It aims to examine how a politics of time shapes, limits, or enables everyday life for the displaced and for aid workers in the camp. Why look at time? Displacement is most often a study of space. But in displacement, it is seldom only a question of where but also of when. Power permeates through temporal politics just as much as it flows through spatial frontiers. To analyze time and space together is to view a more complete picture of how systems are articulated. It also illuminates the ways that such power creates opportunities for resistance and alternative subjectivities. Most importantly, it allows for a more productive dialogue between the two: how the camp system shapes lives and how camp residents navigate them. 

Temporal experience easily carries “a guise of universality” (Cohen 2018, 10). The universality of time—one thing that every living being shares is the experience of time and its simultaneous finitude and infiniteness—lends it the tempting misperception of existing outside the political. But time is, on the contrary, inherently political. The geographer Ian Klinke (2012) argues not only that time is just as political as space; he puts forward the assertion that chronopolitics, the politics of time, must be acknowledged as existing and operating already within geopolitics. Following Klinke, anthropologist Laura Bear (2016, 488) traces how ethnography has challenged the idea of a “single chronopolitics”—that is, the concept that time is universally linear. Time is messy, multiplicious, intangible, everywhere- and-nowhere (see Adam 1998; Chakrabarty 2004; Jacobsen, Karlsen, and Khosravi 2021). Through ethnography, this book explores the multiple intertwining and often contradicting temporalities embedded within everyday life in Azraq camp, folding back layers of permanence and transience to reveal less visible “timescapes” (Adam 1998, 10). Invoking the vocabulary of timescapes enables us to conceive of time and temporal relations, including pace, rhythms, tempos, practices, interactions, bodies, and dimensions, in a more accessible manner. 

Following time throughout the camp illuminates what appear to be opposing themes as actually interdependent: emergency and bureaucracy, waiting and resisting, care and control. A focus on space alone would reveal the oppressiveness of the camp—and it is oppressive—but this would be an incomplete examination. The contrasting, but not always opposing, temporalities experienced by Jordanian aid workers and camp residents within the same space illustrate how Azraq’s logic of emergency prioritizes the system over the individual. As is explored throughout these pages, time and space in the camp are interlaced vessels through which a bureaucratized response to forty thousand displaced residents is formulated. I call it a “nine-to-five emergency.”

New Texts Out Now: Mandy Turner and Cherine Hussein, guest eds. "Israel-Palestine after Oslo: Mapping Transformations in a Time of Deepening Crisis." Special Issue of Conflict, Security & Development

Conflict, Security and Development, Volume 15, No. 5 (December 2015) Special issue: "Israel-Palestine after Oslo: Mapping Transformations in a Time of Deepening Crisis," Guest Editors: Mandy Turner and Cherine Hussein.

Jadaliyya (J): What made you compile this volume?

Mandy Turner (MT): Both the peace process and the two-state solution are dead. Despite more than twenty years of negotiations, Israel’s occupation, colonization and repression continue–and the political and geographical fragmentation of the Palestinian people is proceeding apace.

This is not news, nor is it surprising to any keen observer of the situation. But what is surprising–and thus requires explanation – is the resilience of the Oslo framework and paradigm: both objectively and subjectively. It operates objectively as a straitjacket by trapping Palestinians in economic and security arrangements that are designed to ensure stabilization and will not to lead to sovereignty or a just and sustainable solution. And it operates subjectively as a straitjacket by shutting out discussion of alternative ways of understanding the situation and ways out of the impasse. The persistence of this framework that is focused on conflict management and stabilization, is good for Israel but bad for Palestinians.

The Oslo peace paradigm–of a track-one, elite-level, negotiated two-state solution–is therefore in crisis. And yet it is entirely possible that the current situation could continue for a while longer–particularly given the endorsement and support it enjoys from the major Western donors and the “international community,” as well as the fact that there has been no attempt to develop an alternative. The immediate short-term future is therefore bleak.

Guided by these observations, this special issue sought to undertake two tasks. The first task was to analyze the perceptions underpinning the Oslo framework and paradigm as well as some of the transformations instituted by its implementation: why is it so resilient, what has it created? The second task, which follows on from the first, was then to ask: how can we reframe our understanding of what is happening, what are some potential alternatives, and who is arguing and mobilizing for them?

These questions and themes grew out of a number of conversations with early-career scholars – some based at the Kenyon Institute in East Jerusalem, and some based in the occupied Palestinian territory and elsewhere. These conversations led to two interlinked panels at the International Studies Association annual convention in Toronto, Canada, in March 2014. To have two panels accepted on “conflict transformation and resistance in Palestine” at such a conventional international relations conference with (at the time unknown) early-career scholars is no mean feat. The large and engaged audience we received at these panels – with some very established names coming along (one of whom contributed to this special issue) – convinced us that this new stream of scholars and scholarship should have an outlet.  

J: What particular topics, issues, and literatures do the articles address?

MT: The first half of the special issue analyzes how certain problematic assumptions shaped the Oslo framework, and how the Oslo framework in turn shaped the political, economic and territorial landscape.

Virginia Tilley’s article focuses on the paradigm of conflict resolution upon which the Oslo Accords were based, and calls for a re-evaluation of what she argues are the two interlinked central principles underpinning its worldview: internationally accepted notions of Israeli sovereignty; and the internationally accepted idea that the “conflict” is essentially one between two peoples–the “Palestinian people” and the “Jewish people”. Through her critical interrogation of these two “common sense” principles, Tilley proposes that the “conflict” be reinterpreted as an example of settler colonialism, and, as a result of this, recommends an alternative conflict resolution model based on a paradigm shift away from an ethno-nationalist division of the polity towards a civic model of the nation.

Tariq Dana unpacks another central plank of the Oslo paradigm–that of promoting economic relations between Israel and the OPT. He analyses this through the prism of “economic peace” (particularly the recent revival of theories of “capitalist peace”), whose underlying assumptions are predicated on the perceived superiority of economic approaches over political approaches to resolving conflict. Dana argues that there is a symbiosis between Israeli strategies of “economic peace” and recent Palestinian “statebuilding strategies” (referred to as Fayyadism), and that both operate as a form of pacification and control because economic cooperation leaves the colonial relationship unchallenged.

The political landscape in the OPT has been transformed by the Oslo paradigm, particularly by the creation of the Palestinian Authority (PA). Alaa Tartir therefore analyses the basis, agenda and trajectory of the PA, particularly its post-2007 state building strategy. By focusing on the issue of local legitimacy and accountability, and based on fieldwork in two sites in the occupied West Bank (Balata and Jenin refugee camps), Tartir concludes that the main impact of the creation of the PA on ordinary people’s lives has been the strengthening of authoritarian control and the hijacking of any meaningful visions of Palestinian liberation.

The origin of the administrative division between the West Bank and Gaza Strip is the focus of Tareq Baconi’s article. He charts how Hamas’s initial opposition to the Oslo Accords and the PA was transformed over time, leading to its participation (and success) in the 2006 legislative elections. Baconi argues that it was the perceived demise of the peace process following the collapse of the Camp David discussions that facilitated this change. But this set Hamas on a collision course with Israel and the international community, which ultimately led to the conflict between Hamas and Fateh, and the administrative division, which continues to exist.

The special issue thereafter focuses, in the second section, on alternatives and resistance to Oslo’s transformations.

Cherine Hussein’s article charts the re-emergence of the single-state idea in opposition to the processes of separation unleashed ideologically and practically that were codified in the Oslo Accords. Analysing it as both a movement of resistance and as a political alternative to Oslo, while recognizing that it is currently largely a movement of intellectuals (particularly of diaspora Palestinians and Israelis), Hussein takes seriously its claim to be a more just and liberating alternative to the two-state solution.

My article highlights the work of a small but dedicated group of anti-Zionist Jewish-Israeli activists involved in two groups: Zochrot and Boycott from Within. Both groups emerged in the post-Second Intifada period, which was marked by deep disillusionment with the Oslo paradigm. This article unpacks the alternative – albeit marginalized – analysis, solution and route to peace proposed by these groups through the application of three concepts: hegemony, counter-hegemony and praxis. The solution, argue the activists, lies in Israel-Palestine going through a process of de-Zionization and decolonization, and the process of achieving this lies in actions in solidarity with Palestinians.

This type of solidarity action is the focus of the final article by Suzanne Morrison, who analyses the “We Divest” campaign, which is the largest divestment campaign in the US and forms part of the wider Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. Through attention to their activities and language, Morrison shows how “We Divest”, with its networked, decentralized, grassroots and horizontal structure, represents a new way of challenging Israel’s occupation and the suppression of Palestinian rights.

The two parts of the special issue are symbiotic: the critique and alternative perspectives analyzed in part two are responses to the issues and problems identified in part one.

J: How does this volume connect to and/or depart from your previous work?

MT: My work focuses on the political economy of donor intervention (which falls under the rubric of “peacebuilding”) in the OPT, particularly a critique of the Oslo peace paradigm and framework. This is a product of my broader conceptual and historical interest in the sociology of intervention as a method of capitalist expansion and imperial control (as explored in “The Politics of International Intervention: the Tyranny of Peace”, co-edited with Florian Kuhn, Routledge, 2016), and how post-conflict peacebuilding and development agendas are part of this (as explored in “Whose Peace: Critical Perspectives on the Political Economy of Peacebuilding”, co-edited with Michael Pugh and Neil Cooper (PalgraveMacmillan, 2008).  

My first book on Palestine (co-edited with Omar Shweiki), Decolonizing Palestinian Political Economy: De-development and Beyond (PalgraveMacmillan, 2014), was a collection of essays by experts in their field, of the political-economic experience of different sections of the Palestinian community. The book, however, aimed to reunite these individual experiences into one historical political-economy narrative of a people experiencing a common theme of dispossession, disenfranchisement and disarticulation. It was guided by the desire to critically assess the utility of the concept of de-development to different sectors and issues–and had a foreword by Sara Roy, the scholar who coined the term, and who was involved in the workshop from which the book emerged.

This co-edited special issue (with Cherine Hussein, who, at the time of the issue construction, was the deputy director of the Kenyon Institute) was therefore the next logical step in my research on Palestine, although my article on Jewish-Israeli anti-Zionists did constitute a slight departure from my usual focus.

J: Who do you hope will read this volume, and what sort of impact would you like it to have?

MT: I would imagine the main audience will be those whose research and political interests lie in Palestine Studies. It is difficult, given the structure of academic publishing – which has become ever more corporate and money grabbing – for research outputs such as this to be accessed by the general public. Only those with access to academic libraries are sure to be able to read it – and this is a travesty, in my opinion. To counteract this commodification of knowledge, we should all provide free access to our outputs through online open source websites such as academia.edu, etc. If academic research is going to have an impact beyond merely providing more material for teaching and background reading for yet more research (which is inaccessible to the general public) then this is essential. Websites such as Jadaliyya are therefore incredibly important.

Having said all that, I am under no illusions about the potential for ANY research on Israel-Palestine to contribute to changing the dynamics of the situation. However, as a collection of excellent analyses conducted by mostly early-career scholars in the field of Palestine studies, I am hopeful that their interesting and new perspectives will be read and digested. 

J: What other projects are you working on now?

MT: I am currently working on an edited volume provisionally entitled From the River to the Sea: Disintegration, Reintegration and Domination in Israel and Palestine. This book is the culmination of a two-year research project funded by the British Academy, which analyzed the impacts of the past twenty years of the Oslo peace framework and paradigm as processes of disintegration, reintegration and domination – and how they have created a new socio-economic and political landscape, which requires new agendas and frameworks. I am also working on a new research project with Tariq Dana at Birzeit University on capital and class in the occupied West Bank.

Excerpt from the Editor’s Note 

[Note: This issue was published in Dec. 2015]

Initially perceived to have inaugurated a new era of hope in the search for peace and justice in Palestine-Israel, the Oslo peace paradigm of a track one, elite-level, negotiated two-state solution is in crisis today, if not completely at an end.

While the major Western donors and the ‘international community’ continue to publicly endorse the Oslo peace paradigm, Israeli and Palestinian political elites have both stepped away from it. The Israeli government has adopted what appears to be an outright rejection of the internationally-accepted end-goal of negotiations, i.e. the emergence of a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital. In March 2015, in the final days of his re-election campaign, Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, visited the Jewish settlement of Har Homa in Palestinian East Jerusalem, which is regarded as illegal under international law. Reminding its inhabitants that it was him and his Likud government that had established the settlement in 1997 as part of the Israeli state’s vision of a unified indivisible Jerusalem, he promised to expand the construction of settlements in East Jerusalem if re-elected. And in an interview with Israeli news site, NRG, Netanyahu vowed that the prospects of a Palestinian state were non-existent as long as he remained in office. Holding on to the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt), he argued, was necessary to ensure Israel’s security in the context of regional instability and Islamic extremism. It is widely acknowledged that Netanyahu’s emphasis on Israel’s security—against both external and internal enemies—gave him a surprise win in an election he was widely expected to lose.

Despite attempts to backtrack under recognition that the US and European states are critical of this turn in official Israeli state policy, Netanyahu’s promise to bury the two-state solution in favour of a policy of further annexation has become the Israeli government’s official intent, and has been enthusiastically endorsed by leading ministers and key advisers.

[…]

The Palestinian Authority (PA) based in the West Bank also appears to have rejected a key principle of the Oslo peace paradigm—that of bilateral negotiations under the supervision of the US. Despite a herculean effort by US Secretary of State, John Kerry, to bring the two parties to the negotiating table, in response to the lack of movement towards final status issues and continued settlement expansion (amongst other issues), the Palestinian political elite have withdrawn from negotiations and resumed attempts to ‘internationalise the struggle’ by seeking membership of international organisations such as the United Nations (UN), and signing international treaties such as the Rome Statute, the founding treaty of the International Criminal Court. This change of direction is part of a rethink in the PA and PLO’s strategy rooted in wider discussions and debates. The publication of a document by the Palestine Strategy Study Group (PSSG) in August 2008, the production of which involved many members of the Palestinian political elite (and whose recommendations were studiously discussed at the highest levels of the PA and PLO), showed widespread discontent with the bilateral negotiations framework and suggested ways in which Palestinians could ‘regain the initiative’.

[…]

And yet despite these changes in official Palestinian and Israeli political strategies that signal a deepening of the crisis, donors and the ‘international community’ are reluctant to accept the failure of the Oslo peace paradigm. This political myopia has meant the persistence of a framework that is increasingly divorced from the possibility of a just and sustainable peace. It is also acting as an ideological straitjacket by shutting out alternative interpretations. This special issue seeks a way out of this political and intellectual dead end. In pursuit of this, our various contributions undertake what we regard to be two key tasks: first, to critically analyse the perceptions underpinning the Oslo paradigm and the transformations instituted by its implementation; and second, to assess some alternative ways of understanding the situation rooted in new strategies of resistance that have emerged in the context of these transformations in the post-Oslo landscape.

[…]

Taken as a whole, the articles in this special issue aim to ignite conversations on the conflict that are not based within abstracted debates that centre upon the peace process itself—but that begin from within the realities and geographies of both the continually transforming land of Palestine-Israel and the voices, struggles, worldviews and imaginings of the future of the people who presently inhabit it. For it is by highlighting these transformations, and from within these points of beginning, that we believe more hopeful pathways for alternative ways forward can be collectively imagined, articulated, debated and built.