2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2016.01.010
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Ethnic cleansing and the formation of settler colonial geographies

Abstract: The Daily Show was well-known for its left leaning political satire. Although the program focused on the United States, from time to time Stewart broadened the coverage and examined political events in other countries. Over the years, the policies adopted by the Israeli government had been among his satirical targets. A section dealing with Israel's 2014 military campaign in Gaza caught our eyes, since in the map suspended behind Stewart Israel's borders were not drawn according to the internationally recogniz… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…These discussions have begun to interrogate how Foucault's conception of biopolitics is responsible for “whitewashing” the coloniality and raciality of modern violence and power (Howell & Richter‐Montpetit, ). Geographical work on biopolitics remains focused on overt physical forms of violence, confinement, bordering and erasure (Plonski, ; Schofield, ; Smith & Isleem, ) as well as the political technologies they rely on like security and surveillance practices (Bastos, ; Machold, ; Shalhoub‐Kevorkian, ; Zureik, Lyon, & Abu‐Laban, ), risk and supply chain management (Pasternak & Dafnos, ) and juridical innovations (Gordon & Ram, ; Hunt, ; Pasternak, , ; Tawil‐Souri, ). Here studies focus centrally on theorizing the connections between race, white supremacy, and settler colonialism (Bonds & Inwood, ; Clarno, ; Eastwood, ; Inwood & Bonds, ; Mott, , ; Tatour, ).…”
Section: Population Management/biopoliticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These discussions have begun to interrogate how Foucault's conception of biopolitics is responsible for “whitewashing” the coloniality and raciality of modern violence and power (Howell & Richter‐Montpetit, ). Geographical work on biopolitics remains focused on overt physical forms of violence, confinement, bordering and erasure (Plonski, ; Schofield, ; Smith & Isleem, ) as well as the political technologies they rely on like security and surveillance practices (Bastos, ; Machold, ; Shalhoub‐Kevorkian, ; Zureik, Lyon, & Abu‐Laban, ), risk and supply chain management (Pasternak & Dafnos, ) and juridical innovations (Gordon & Ram, ; Hunt, ; Pasternak, , ; Tawil‐Souri, ). Here studies focus centrally on theorizing the connections between race, white supremacy, and settler colonialism (Bonds & Inwood, ; Clarno, ; Eastwood, ; Inwood & Bonds, ; Mott, , ; Tatour, ).…”
Section: Population Management/biopoliticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are a few fundamental norms established within settler colonial theory; principally, that the settler colonial state’s “dominant feature is not exploitation but replacement” (Wolfe, 1999: 164) predicated on the “elimination of the native” (Wolfe, 2006). How settler colonialism manifests is contested among scholars, with some positing that divergent circumstances of foundational violence shape the settler state’s manifestations of power (Elkins and Pedersen, 2005), and others locating continued native presence as the key driver in the formation of the settler colonial structure (Gordon and Ram, 2016). Despite this, there is a consensus that the settler colonial state is structured around the exclusion of the native population – often by genocidal means – which Wolfe terms the “logic of elimination” (2006: 387), in which any traces of the native population must be destroyed and replaced.…”
Section: The Racist Necropolitics Of Zionist Colonialismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wacquant's sociology of urban marginality draws on case studies from the global North and is mostly interested in neoliberal securitization rather than colonial sociospatial formations. Yet, once it is put alongside recent works that examine the settler‐colonial dimension of Israeli‐Palestinian societies and geographies (Rouhana and Sabbagh‐Khouri, ; Gordon and Ram, ), the sociology of urban marginality can effectively travel to urban Israel, helping understand the everyday dilemmas that Palestinians living there face as they grapple with criminalization, punitive control and containment through ‘ethnocratic’ planning. More generally, it can help address how the spatial distribution of security practices (for example, the interplay of military and humanitarian urbanism in West Bank refugee camps versus the policing and planning patterns in Lydda) might impact the spatial meanings that circulate among differently situated Palestinians.…”
Section: Towards An Everyday Perspective On Urban Militarismmentioning
confidence: 99%