Introduction: The Many Faces of Apartheid - Ilan Pappé Part I: Historical Roots 1. Birds of a Feather: Israel and Apartheid South Africa Colonialism of a Special Type - Ronnie Kasrils 2. The Many Faces of European Colonialism: The Templers, the Basel Mission and the Zionist Movement - Ilan Pappé 3. Apartheid and the Question of Origin - Oren Ben-Dor Part II: The Boundaries of Comparison 4. 'Visible Equality' as Confidence Trick - Jonathan Cook 5. Apartheid, Israel and Palestinian Statehood - Leila Farsakh Part III: Nuanced Comparisons 6. Femicide in Apartheid: The Parallel Interplay between Racism and Sexism in South Africa and Palestine–Israel - Anthony Löwstedt 7. The Many Faces of Protest: A Comparative Analysis of Protest Groups in Israel and South Africa - Amneh Badran Part IV: Future Models and Perspectives 8. The Inevitable Impossible: South African Experience and a Single State - Steven Friedman 9. Redefining the Conflict in Israel–Palestine: The Tricky Question of Sovereignty - Virginia Tilley 10. Israel–Palestine and the Apartheid Analogy: Critics, Apologists and Strategic Lessons - Ran Greenstein
Israel and South Africa assesses the parallels between the Zionist and apartheid regimes, as well as their implications for international law, activism and policy making.
Ilan Pappé is professor of history at the University of ExeterA veteran of the Yom Kippur War and two time Knesset candidate, Pappé left Israel in 2007 after his endorsement of an academic boycott of Israel led to calls for him to resign from his post at the University of Haifa. He remains one of Israel’s most prominent and outspoken anti-Zionist academics. His previous books include The Modern Middle East (2005), Gaza in Crisis: Reflections on Israel’s War against the Palestinians (with Noam Chomsky, 2010) and The Forgotten Palestinians: A History of the Palestinians in Israel (2011).
A key book for deepening the discussion of Israel as an apartheid
state of a special kind, and for exploring a different future for
Palestinians. The essays give no easy answers, but much food for
thought, and for hope. This book's insights and analysis will be
widely debated - it should be a best seller.
*Victoria Brittain, journalist and author of Shadow Lives: The
Forgotten Women of the War on Terror*
The collection provides some excellent moments of reflection on
apartheid in South Africa that are given new perspective through
exciting comparative scholarship and can also aid in deciphering
the post-apartheid trajectory of the country.
*Africa at LSE*
A rich accumulation of material and ideas.
*Electronic Intifada*
For Israel and its allies, any talk of apartheid remains anathema …
The essays in this book are evidence of how insightful, and
fruitful, such a comparison and analysis can be.
*Journal of Palestine Studies*
This is an exceptionally important contribution to contemporary
debates on Israeli apartheid. There is simply no other collection
out there that brings such historical and comparative breadth to
bear on this question - a must read!
*Adam Hanieh, SOAS, University of London*
Israel is trying to refine the nefarious policy of apartheid to
keep the Palestinian people apart. This book cogently argues the
inefficacy of the policy of divide and rule. A must read.
*Arun Gandhi, founder of the M. K. Gandhi Institute for
Nonviolence*
One of the most important volumes on the issue of Israeli
apartheid. Skilfully incorporating perspectives from various
disciplines, the authors provide an excellent and extremely
relevant examination of the systemic infrastructure of the Israeli
state's colonial and apartheid enterprise.
*Farid Esack, University of Johannesburg*
Comparing Israel and apartheid South Africa is one of the great
taboos of our time. This collection breaks the taboo in examining
settler colonialism and apartheid in both Israel itself and the
Occupied Palestinian Territory.
*John Dugard, former Special Rapporteur to the UN Human Rights
Council*
It is clear from this finely crafted collection of essays that
Israel has much in common with white-ruled South Africa. Indeed,
Israel and South Africa provides abundant evidence that Israel is
worse than South Africa was, and that Israeli apartheid will be
more enduring than the South African variant. This smart and
informative book should be read by every person who cares about
Israel and its victims.
*John J. Mearsheimer, author of The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign
Policy*
A terrible evil makes the apartheid comparison between Israel and
South Africa a valid exercise, that is, the intentional prevention
of shared life. On this basis, this book tasks the comparative
method as a tool to challenge the dismal reality in Palestine.
*Marcelo Svirsky, author of After Israel*
Demonstrates how Apartheid as a political system of segregation is
not specific to any particular race or country, and why invoking it
in the context of Israel /Palestine is both instructive and
instrumental. The authors show there's lots to learn from the
successful struggle against the Apartheid of South Africa.
*Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera English, and author of
Palestine/Israel: Peace or Apartheid*
Nine superbly qualified authors confirm from a variety of
perspectives the allegations of apartheid directed at Israel. This
book is profoundly convincing, and should put an end to serious
debate about whether Israel is guilty of apartheid.
*Richard Falk, author of Palestine: The Legitimacy of Hope*
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