Palestinian Women and Resistance: Perceptions, Attitudes, and Strategies in the Bethlehem Governorate
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Kayali, Liyana
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
While the First Intifada (1987-ca.1993) in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories (OPT) is generally regarded as the peak
of Palestinian women’s participation in the Palestinian
resistance movement, the post-Oslo period has been characterised
by a dramatic decrease in women’s participation. This decline
stands at odds with the fact that the post-Oslo period has seen
the consolidation of Israeli occupation and settler-colonialism
in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), and a substantial
deterioration of the Palestinian situation. One school of thought
attributes the decline of Palestinian women’s participation in
resistance to wider ‘apathy’ and ‘stasis’ amongst
Palestinians in the contemporary period. However, such
assessments are reductive and fail to apprehend the
particularities and agency of Palestinian resistance and how
Palestinian women, in particular, negotiate these complexities.
This thesis thus aims to contribute a more nuanced understanding
of how Palestinian women in the post-Oslo period perceive,
negotiate, and enact resistance. In particular, it focuses on
Palestinian women’s involvement in nonviolent resistance, as
although nonviolence is posited to open up spaces for women’s
involvement in resistance, Palestinian women have also retreated
significantly from nonviolent actions in the contemporary period.
To this end, the thesis is framed by a conceptual approach
bringing together feminist, social movement, and nonviolent
action theorising, and draws on extensive ethnographic fieldwork
conducted with women in the Bethlehem governorate.
The resultant analysis demonstrates that, far from being
‘apathetic’, Palestinian women remain deeply committed to the
goals of national liberation and wish to contribute to an
effective popular resistance movement. Yet many Palestinian women
feel alienated from prevailing forms of collective popular
resistance in the OPT due to the low levels of legitimacy they
accord such actions in their current forms. This alienation has
been made stark by the gendered and intersecting impacts of
expanding settler-colonialism, tightening spatial control, a
weakened and depoliticised civil society, Israeli and Palestinian
Authority (PA) repression and violence, and a deteriorating
economy - all of which have raised the barriers Palestinian women
face to active participation. With any form of resistance
(including nonviolence) now entailing great risk, women
necessarily limit their participation to those actions they see
as legitimate and likely to create meaningful change.
For the women interviewed, the legitimacy accorded to particular
resistance actions depends on a) the motives of those involved
(e.g. whether they are seen to be acting out of
national/community concern, or self-interest/ego); and b) whether
activities are authentic (i.e. have not been influenced and/or
funded by the PA or foreign donors). What the women perceive,
therefore, is a legitimacy crisis within the Palestinian
resistance movement. However, rather than turning away from
resistance altogether, this study finds that Palestinian women
envision and enact alternative nonviolent strategies whose
methods are largely individualised, indirect, and incremental,
but aim at a sustainable transformation of Palestinian society
and polity. This thesis thus offers crucial insight into the
current reality of Palestinian women’s participation in
resistance, and contributes an approach that moves beyond the
‘visibility bias’ of dominant approaches to social movements
and nonviolence.
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