Abstract

This article offers insights on how the institutional and material limitations, posed by the Israeli/Egyptian blockage on Gaza, promote learning processes that impact the strategic choices of an activist collective. It uses ethnographic data to explore micro processes of reasoning and decision-making in “Green Knowledge Community, Beats for Gaza”, a network of Palestinian and international group of young activists aiming to promote grassroots-level resilience to Israeli occupation in this Palestinian territory. It analyses the shift from an initial focus on building an arts therapy school, which turned out to be unfeasible due to limitations both of the ground and among potential international donors, to a focus on permaculture, regarded as a strategy that could circumvent those limitations by mobilizing endogenous resources. The collective became progressively aware of the need to direct transnational knowledge diffusion to the support of the struggle for food sovereignty and grassroots economic self-determination through the localizing of agricultural production. This was due to the circumstances of the Israeli military occupation, Israeli/Egyptian blockage and the inclusion of a significant amount of arable land in the Gaza/Israel buffer, as well as to strategic choices of international donors, as well as the Hamas government.

Highlights

  • This piece of exploratory research uses a dialogical, auto-ethnographic method to offer insights into microprocesses of reasoning and decision-making, among a youth activist collective regarding strategies for the promotion of communitylevel resilience

  • The standpoint used for analysis in this paper is that of the founder and coordinator of “Green Knowledge Community, Beats for Gaza,” Majed Abusalama, a young activist from the Gaza Strip currently living in Europe

  • Knowledge diffusion and the struggle for the commons. Majed and his on-the-ground and international allies went through a learning process on how to effectively promote grassroots resilience in the Gaza Strip, taking into account the circumstances of the Israeli military occupation, Israeli/ Egyptian blockage and the inclusion of a significant amount of arable land in the Gaza/Israel buffer zone

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Summary

Introduction

This piece of exploratory research uses a dialogical, auto-ethnographic method to offer insights into microprocesses of reasoning and decision-making, among a youth activist collective regarding strategies for the promotion of communitylevel resilience. It aims to promote resilience by altering the power relations which promoted conflict in the first place, and creating conditions which allow peace to become self-sustaining, by supporting those who have been affected by conflict in envisioning goals beyond their immediate survival (Llewellyn & Philpott, 2014) These goals include the overcoming of “the militarization of social life, politics and economy” This approach to peacebuilding takes into account the need to guarantee the material and institutional infrastructure aimed at promoting economic development, participatory governance and the non-violent resolution of future conflicts (Miall, Ramsbotham & Woodhouse, 1999; Fischer, 2004) It seeks, to support the transformation of social and material conditions in such a way so as to develop sustainable living and social systems. Beats for Gaza, a grassroots organization, faced many challenges to bring out their influence about their cultural and/or ecological “Green Knowledge Community” projects, those projects are local, organic and by the young people of Gaza

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