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Cultural Anthropology
February 2007, Vol. 22, No. 1, pp. 129-169
Posted online on January 12, 2007.
(doi:10.1525/can.2007.22.1.129)
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DIFFICULT DISTINCTIONS: Refugee Law, Humanitarian Practice, and Political Identification in Gaza

ILANA FELDMAN

New York University



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Concepts: refugees, citizenship, humanitarianism, law, Palestine

In this article, I explore the intersection of humanitarian practice and refugee law in shaping categories of “refugee” and “citizen” in Gaza in the first years after 1948. I examine how humanitarian practice produced enduring distinctions within the Gazan population and provided a space in which ideas about Palestinian citizenship began to take shape. A key argument is that humanitarianism, despite commitments to political neutrality, often has profound and enduring political effects. In this case, humanitarian distinctions contributed to making the “refugee” a central figure in the Palestinian political landscape. I also consider how humanitarianism in Palestine was guided by the larger, emerging postwar refugee regime, even as Palestinians were formally excluded from some of its mechanisms.

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Taken in 1965 near Ambo, Ethiopia, this photo shows 11 Oromo women carrying wheat from the field where it was harvested so that it can be threshed near the home of the couple that grew it.