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The British Mandate and the crisis of Palestinian landlessness, 1929–1936.

Authors :
Anderson, Charles
Source :
Middle Eastern Studies. Mar2018, Vol. 54 Issue 2, p171-215. 45p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

This article examines landlessness among Palestinians as a facet of colonial policy in Mandate Palestine before the 1936 revolt. The growth of what was sometimes called a ‘landless class’ came into official view after the violence of 1929. Subsequent investigations indicated that landlessness was a significant problem and that it threatened to destabilize the Mandate. The effort to ameliorate the crisis of landlessness, however, clashed with the dominant colonial conception of settler developmentalism, the notion that Jews, not Arabs, were the agents of modern economic development in Palestine. The first part of this examination revisits the contest over the 1930 White Paper, focusing on its relationship to the advent of mass landlessness. The rapid defeat of the new policy via the MacDonald letter left the landlessness problem to fester while simultaneously obscuring it. As the situation in the Arab countryside continued to deteriorate, the onset of the fifthaliyatemporarily reinforced erroneous assumptions about the potential to rectify the problem through theyishuv's development.By the time mass landlessness was ‘rediscovered’ and new land controls designed to protect Arab smallholders were on their way to promulgation in 1935–1936, the Palestinian countryside was just months away from determined revolt. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00263206
Volume :
54
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Middle Eastern Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126867342
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2017.1372427