Decolonization, Dignity and Development Aid: A Judicial Education Experience in Palestine

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Decolonization, Dignity and Development Aid: A Judicial Education Experience in Palestine
Abstract
Taking Palestine as the focus of inquiry, and drawing on our experiences as co-directors of Karamah, a judicial education initiative focused on dignity, we reflect on the attributes of colonisation and the possibilities of decolonisation in Palestine through development aid. We conclude that decolonisation is possible even within development aid frameworks. We envision the current colonial condition in Palestine as a multi-faceted, complex and dynamic mesh that tightens and expands its control over the coveted colonial subject but that also contains holes that offer opportunities for resistance or refusal. We turn to Karamah to illustrate how some judges have insisted on a professional identity that merges the concepts of human dignity and self-determination and ultimately rejects the colonial condition inherent in both occupation and development aid. We conclude that in this process of professional identity (re)formation, members of the Palestinian judiciary have helped reveal the demands of decolonisation by demonstrating their commitment to realising human dignity through institutional power, and bringing occupation back into international development discourse.
Genre
SSRN Scholarly Paper
Archive ID
2868366
Place
Rochester, NY
Date
2016-07-15
Accessed
9/4/23, 1:30 AM
Short Title
Decolonization, Dignity and Development Aid
Language
en
Library Catalog
Social Science Research Network
Citation
Bahdi, R., & Kassis, M. (2016). Decolonization, Dignity and Development Aid: A Judicial Education Experience in Palestine (SSRN Scholarly Paper 2868366). https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=2868366
Author / Editor