London
Monday February 11th
Introducing Israe
l6.15pm, Khalili Lecture Theatre
SOAS - School of Oriental and African Studies
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG
Linda Tabar
PhD Candidate at SOAS. Her research focuses on Palestinian memory, identity and anti-colonial nationalism's encounter violence, dispossession and the hierarchal ordering mechanism of modernity. She also co-authored a study for Muwatin on the transformation of Palestinian NGOs under the Oslo donor aid regime.
Excluded from Within: The Right to Health in the Negev Desert
Rochama Marton
Psychiatrist, feminist and human rights activist, founder and President of Physicians for Human Rights-Israel(PHR). Author of numerous papers on psychiatry, human rights and political-psychiatric analysis, and co-edited Torture: Human Rights, Medical Ethics and the Case of Israel. Recipient of several peace and human rights awards.
Chair: tbc
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Wednesday February 13th
Chicago: Everything that Happened, Happened here First
6.15pm, Khalili Lecture Theatre
SOAS - School of Oriental and African Studies
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG
Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin
Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin are a photographic team based in London. Together they have produced five photographic books including Mr Mkhize's Portrait (2004) which documented South Africa ten years after apartheid and Chicago (2006), an exploration of contemporary Israel.They are the recipients of numerous awards for their work.
Chair: tbc
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Thursday February 14th
Media and Normalising Israeli Apartheid
6.15pm, Khalili Lecture Theatre
SOAS - School of Oriental and African Studies
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG
The Story of the “Israeli-Palestinian Conflict” According to the Main Media in Israel
Yizhar Be’er Executive Director of Keshev - The Center for the Protection of Democracy in Israel, former executive director of B’Tselem – The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, and Haaretz correspondent for the Palestinian occupied territories during the first Palestinian Intifada.
Images of Palestinian Citizens in Israeli Media
Haneen Zoubi General Director of I’lam – Media Center for Arab Palestinians in Israel. Political and feminist activist, and contributor to various Arab newspapers on feminist-national emancipation, Israeli media policy and regulations.
European Media: Complicity and “Neutrality”
Dina Matar Lecturer in Arab media and International Political Communication at SOAS, and was a foreign correspondent and editor mostly covering the Middle East, Europe and Africa. She is co-editor and co-founder of the forthcoming “The Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication” and is researching and writing a book on Palestinian collective memory.
Chair: Eyal Sivan Israeli Film-maker based in London. A Reader (Associate Professor) in Media at the School of Social Sciences at the University of East London (UEL). Producer, essayist and editor, and directed over ten full length political documentaries of which he received a number of prestigious awards, his films include: Aqabat Jaber-Passing Through (1987), Izkor-Salves of Memory 1990), The Specialist (1999), Route 181, Fragments of a Journey in Palestine-Israel (2003) I Love You All (2004) Citizens K (2007).
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Saturday February 16th
Venue: Khalili Lecture Theatre
Registration: 11:00
Session One 11:30 – 13:00
Palestinian Nation under Apartheid
Zionism and Violence: The dynamics of Israeli War Crimes
Nadim Rouhana
Founding Director of Mada el-Carmel: Arab Centre for Applied Social Research, Professor of Conflict Studies, George Mason University, author of Palestinian Citizens in an Ethnic Jewish State: Identities in Conflict (1997) and numerous papers on collective identity, multiethnic states, democratic citizenship, and Palestinians in Israel.
Semitism and the Palestinians
Joseph Massad
Associated Professor of Modern Arab Politics and Intellectual History, Columbia University, author of Colonial Effects: The Making of National Identity in Jordan (2001), and The Persistence of the Palestinian Question: Essays on Zionism and the Palestinians (2006), Desiring Arabs (2007) and numerous articles on Palestinian identity and Zionism.
Chair: Martha Mundy
Specialist at the LSE in the anthropology of the Arab World whose research has concerned anthropology of law and the state, the comparative sociology of agrarian systems, and the anthropology of kinship and family.
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Lunch break
13:00 – 14:00
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Session Two
14:00- 15:30
Law as mechanism of violence
The Palestinian Right of Return and the Israeli Law of Return
Susan Akram
Professor at Boston University School of Law. Taught at Al-Quds University and researched legal issues relating to the Palestinian refugee question. Her work focuses on legal issues concerning Palestinian refugees, refugees in the Arab/Muslim world, US domestic civil and immigration rights, and post-September 11 immigration and the 'war on terrorism'.
Apartheid: Visible and Invisible
Ra’ef Zreik
Teaches in Tel Aviv and Haifa Law Schools in the fields of legal and political theory. Lawyer specialising in the fields of land law, planning, and media law. A political activist, was involved in establishing several NGO’s dealing with civil rights issues.
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Coffee Break
15:30 – 16:00
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Session Three
16:00 – 17:30
Resisting Apartheid: Strategies, Struggles, Solutions
Europe and the UK: Supporting the Struggle
Jonathan Rosenhead
Jonathan Rosenhead is Emeritus Professor at the LSE and member of the committee of BRICUP (British Committee for Universities of Palestine) an organisation of UK based academics, set up in response to the Palestinian Call for Academic Boycott.
Rebuilding the National Struggle
Jamal Zahalka
Member of Knesset and head of the Democratic National Assembly Parliamentary group. Founder and former director of Ahali-Center for Community Development. Political analyst with expertise in Palestinian and Israeli societies and politics. He contributes weekly to newspaper and news organisations.
Chair: John Chalcraft
Lecturer in the History and Politics of Empire/Imperialism at the LSE. Research focuses on history from below in the modern Middle East. His work also tackles broader issues in post-materialist labour history, subaltern studies and the study of hegemony and counter-hegemony.
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