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ID099048
Title ProperMoral geopolitics of exported spatial development
Other Title Informationrevisiting Israeli involvement in Africa
LanguageENG
AuthorYacobi, Haim
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article will analyse Israel's past involvement (1956-1973) in Africa, in the context of a wider theoretical conceptualisation of the role of spatial development in the construction of moral geopolitics. Re-thinking the relevance of postcolonial critiques, the paper examines the political and institutional setup underlying Israeli involvement in development in Africa, documenting the scope of this phenomenon by looking at policy makers, professionals and institutions, studying the role of spatial development and planning in the design of Israel's policies, and analysing the actual results of such projects. Despite considerable Israeli involvement and investment in spatial development projects in postcolonial Africa, the existing literature on the subject is narrow, dealing mainly with pragmatic political interests, and there is hardly any structured documentation of Israel's exported spatial development to Africa - its scope, qualities, successes or failures. Moreover, in the wider literature the analysis of spatial development as "exported" knowledge is perceived as a by-product of the polity between Empires and the Margins - an assumption that this paper aims to question.
`In' analytical NoteGeopolitics Vol. 15, No. 3; 2010: p.441 - 461
Journal SourceGeopolitics Vol. 15, No. 3; 2010: p.441 - 461
Key WordsSpatial Development ;  Geopolitics ;  Israel ;  Africa ;  Spatial Development Projects ;  Postcolonial Africa