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מעבדת אדם חברה סביבה

יחידת מחקר בין תחומית העוסקת בממשקים שבין אדם, חברה וסביבה בהקשרים היסטוריים ועכשוויים

Israel and international law

The indigenous concept in supreme court rulings

In 2007, a majority of UN member states adopted a declaration regarding the rights of indigenous people. The declaration acknowledged a series of indigenous rights but failed to provide a concrete definition of who is indigenous. As a result, the term remained vague, open to interpretation and manipulation, and led to confusion and controversy. In Israel meanwhile the indigenous concept found a foothold in public discourse. The Israeli Supreme Court (ISC) first encountered the concept when Negev Bedouin citizens claimed indigenous land rights. Two years later, the ISC applied the same concept in a series of judgments regarding the status of the permanent residents of East Jerusalem. The article examines the way the international indigenous discourse has penetrated ISC rulings and analyzes the phenomenon in light of the judicial activism discourse.

שפת פרסום אנגלית
דפים 172-195
כתב עת Israel Studies
כרך 26
נושא מספר 1
סטטוס פרסום פורסם - 01.01.2021

Keywords

Arab residence
Bedouin
East Jerusalem
Indigenous people
Israel supreme court
Judicial activism

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cultural Studies
History
Anthropology
Sociology and Political Science
Political Science and International Relations
קבצים וקישורים אחרים
Link to publication in Scopus