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Motivations and Forms of Palestinian Political Activism

An examination of individual motivations and participation behaviour in the Palestinian Territories

After 55 years of living under Israeli occupation, many Palestinians in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip continue to struggle for statehood and freedom from perceived injustices in their treatment by Israeli military forces, civilian settlers and the Palestinian Authority. The resulting socio-political and economic frustrations are a plausible explanation for high levels of activism participation overall – yet they fail to account for why Palestinians choose vastly different forms of political action, while others exercise ‘passive activism’ or do not participate at all despite similar living conditions and shared political convictions. Based on semi-structured interviews and novel data collected in a large representative survey, this study examines individual motivations for engaging in different forms of political activism in the Palestinian Territories. Findings are discussed in the broader research context and policy recommendations provided.

Asset-Herausgeber

By: Nils Mallock 

 

Introduction


“Our bullets stop on the body, but the effect of your brush travels all over the world, so it is a dangerous tool”, Taqi Sabateen remembers being told by an Israeli officer.0F1 The artist from the Palestinian village of Husan near Bethlehem had been detained by the military for placing graffiti and paintings on the eight-metre-high wall separating parts of the West Bank from Israeli territories. Depicting soldiers and journalists, his artworks explore various political themes from racism to the isolation felt by many Palestinians today.


Sabateen’s story is no isolated case. Instead, it is just one illustration of the unique nature of modern political activism in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, which overall features high participation rates by international comparison. In 2022, at least one in eight Palestinians engaged in direct political action in some capacity; during the days of the second intifada two decades earlier, some 75% of male and 42% female youth took to the streets.1F2 Yet while core grievances are identified rather consistently throughout the three territories as (1) Israel’s external control over the Gaza Strip, (2) unemployment and poverty, and (3) the continuing occupation of the West Bank,2F3 the specific methods by which people try to address these political issues diverge drastically. Palestinian activism frequently manifests in public demonstrations and spreading of political messages, but also through cultural (e.g., art-based) channels or ‘passive activism’ behaviours such as resisting home evictions. At the extremes of the spectrum, nationalist groups advocate for political violence and armed struggle, while many other Palestinians are not engaged in any form of political expression at all.


From the well-documented challenges of life in the Palestinian Territories3F4 and proclamations by activist movements themselves, it is often concluded that political activism is primarily a reaction to perceived oppression through the Israeli military occupation, expansion of illegal settlements, and administrative corruption within the Palestinian Authority. But at the individual level, the reality today raises two paradoxes. First, being politically active even in less confrontational forms (such as distributing leaflets or organising social media campaigns) requires personal sacrifice beyond time and resource commitment. Amidst ongoing tensions, Palestinian activists face a substantial risk of arrest, injury, death, harassment or property loss. While these costs are borne by activists individually, their political objectives (such as ending the occupation) would usually benefit a larger population and offer no specific rewards to those who fought for them. In light of this unattractive outlook, what motivates some Palestinians to take action nonetheless while others remain inactive? And subsequently, what causes those who become active to do so in fundamentally different ways despite a similar socio-political context and shared goals?


Contrasting the majority of research focusing on societal or group dynamics, this study investigates these questions from an individual psychological perspective. Using both qualitative and quantitative data from field interviews with activists in the West Bank and a representative survey across the Palestinian Territories, it contributes differentiated insights into the motivational drivers of political activism. Results are placed in a discussion of the regional context and policy recommendations are formulated.

For the complete study, please click the download button to the right. 

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