Checkpoint Watch: Reflections on Israel’s Border Administration in the West Bank

Social & Legal Studies 21: 297-320 (2012).

SUNY Buffalo Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2012-042

27 Pages Posted: 6 Mar 2012 Last revised: 6 May 2021

See all articles by Irus Braverman

Irus Braverman

University at Buffalo Law School

Date Written: December 13, 2011

Abstract

This essay sketches my personal impressions of the changes that have occurred over the last decade in Israeli checkpoints in and around Jerusalem. These changes are both in the physical design of the checkpoints as well as in their human management. My particular focus is on the women’s human rights organization MachsomWatch. The role of MachsomWatch has changed in a way that parallels the solidification and the bureaucratization of the border. Nowadays, MachsomWatch women - originally avid protestors of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank - have, despite themselves, become a routine feature in the occupational apparatus. This essay’s grounded ethnographic account provides a vivid illustration of the ways in which resistance can feed into power.

Keywords: Checkpoints and borders, Power and resistance, Israel/Palestine, Bureaucratization, Legal, Ethnography, MachsomWatch, nongovernmental organization

Suggested Citation

Braverman, Irus, Checkpoint Watch: Reflections on Israel’s Border Administration in the West Bank (December 13, 2011). Social & Legal Studies 21: 297-320 (2012). , SUNY Buffalo Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2012-042, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2016200

Irus Braverman (Contact Author)

University at Buffalo Law School ( email )

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HOME PAGE: http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~irusb/

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