Book Launch:
Emptied Lands: A Legal Geography of Bedouin Rights in the Negev
Written by Alexander Kedar, Ahmad Amara and Oren Yiftachel, this book combines legal, geographical and political analysis to introduce a forensic study of how Israel has weaponized the law against Palestine’s most vulnerable inhabitants – the Bedouins.
Since its establishment, the Jewish State has devoted major efforts to secure control over the land of Israel. One example is the protracted legal and territorial strife between the State of Israel and its indigenous Bedouin citizens over their traditional land in the Negev in southern Israel. Emptied Lands investigates this multifaceted land dispute, placing it in historical, legal, geographical, and comparative perspective. The authors provide the first legal geographic analysis of the “Dead Negev Doctrine”, which has been used by Israel to dispossess Bedouin inhabitants of their land and Judaize the southern half of the country. Through crafty use of Ottoman and British laws, particularly the concept of “dead land,” Israel has constructed its own version of terra nullius. Yet, the indigenous space and property system continue to function, creating an ongoing resistance to the Jewish state. This study examines several key land claims and rulings and alternative routes for justice promoted by indigenous communities and civil society movements.