Abstract

ABSTRACT The Oslo Peace Accords are widely regarded as having yielded particular negative socio-economic effects in and on the Palestinian territories. Indeed, the post-Oslo period (1994–2000) is dominated by the economic and political policies and prescriptions of the international donor community and its financial institutions, which tend to assume primary ownership and authorship of the peace process. This paper will explore the link between the globalizing agendas of international donors in post-Oslo Israel/Palestine and the reproduction of structural violence endemic to cultures of violence and conflict. The globalization-as-peacebuilding agenda of the post-Oslo period is shown to rearticulate the asymmetrical relationship between Israel and Palestine.

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