War Economy and Military-Security Production in the Context of the Israeli Settler-Colonialism

Volume 10|Issue 39| Winter 2022 |Articles

Abstract

This study examines the organic relationship between Israeli military-security production and the structure of settler colonialism in Palestine. It argues that the expansion of Israeli settler colonial structure is driven by war economy, which is not only one of the pillars of the concept of power in the Zionist ideology, but also a central instrument in the formation of the state and society in Israel. The paper highlights Israel’s practices of exploiting the Palestinians as a testing ground for its new weapons, which in turns serves the war economy through exports. Unlike classical settler-colonial experiences, the metropole is absent in the case of Israel, and thus the country structurally compensates for its absence through a clientelistic relationship with Western imperialism to gain military support, especially the US, and it relies on arms diplomacy to normalize itself in the regional and international system.

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Assistant Professor in Conflict and Humanitarian Studies at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies. His research concerns the political economy, civil society, social movements, state building and economic development, and the relationship between the state and society, with a research focus on Palestine and the Arab world. Holds a PhD in Political Science from St. Anna's College of Advanced Studies, Italy.

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