Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1458Hits:19106208Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID148622
Title ProperAssembling the fabric of life
Other Title Informationwhen settler colonialism becomes development
LanguageENG
AuthorSalamanca, Omar Jabary
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article brings attention to the political geography of settler colonialism and the ways in which the Palestinian built environment materializes in space, consolidating uneven and racialized landscapes. It argues that settler-colonial space is intimately related to the building of infrastructures structured by development and humanitarian practices. More specifically, the discussion explores how roadscapes are materially and symbolically constructed; it also examines the ways in which development, rather than constituting a tool of empowerment, becomes a mechanism to manage the short-term "humanitarian" needs of Palestinians that arise from the imperatives of settler colonialism. Problematizing road infrastructure allows us to explore the relationship between Palestinian and donor agendas, and concomitant discourses on economic development and state building; in other words, how settler infrastructures are normalized through their association with tropes of modernity, progress, humanitarianism, and development.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Palestine Studies Vol. 35, No.4; Summer 2016: p.64-80
Journal SourceJournal of Palestine Studies 2006-08 35, 4
Key WordsInfrastructure ;  Roads Development ;  Settler-Colonial ;  Spacefabric of Lifestate Building