Israel and Palestine: Boycotts, Divestments, Sanctions, and the Future

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Bousquet, K. (2017). Israel and Palestine: Boycotts, Divestment, Sanctions, and the Future. Solutions 8(1): 42-43. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/israel-palestine-boycotts-divestment-sanctions-future/

Perspectives Israel and Palestine: Boycotts, Divestments, Sanctions, and the Future by Kendall Bousquet

Mary-Katherine Ream

Graffiti on a wall in Bethlehem.

I

s a boycott of Israel an effective strategy for changing the government’s policy? Those in the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement think so. BDS has seen several victories in recent years. In academia, 12 US universities’ student governments, including those of Columbia, Princeton, and Stanford, voted to divest from Israeli companies in 2015. That year also saw the National Women’s Studies Association, the American Anthropological Association, and the National Association of Chicana and Chicano Studies all endorse boycotts of Israeli academic institutions. The United Methodist Church and the US branch of the Presbyterian Church voted overwhelmingly to boycott Israeli settlement products. Over 1,100 black activists,

artists, scholars, and organizations issued a statement entitled “2015 Black Solidarity Statement with Palestine,” intending to link the black struggle in America with the Palestinian struggle. Signatories included Black Lives Matter cofounders Patrisse Cullors, Angela Davis, and Cornel West. R&B singer Lauryn Hill canceled a performance in Israel in response to calls for her to boycott the country. In August, United Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers became the first national union in the US to endorse BDS. At the highest level of influence of any of these examples, 60 members of the US Congress publicly elected to boycott Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu’s March 2015 speech to Congress, after demands from constituents that they skip the speech.

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Widely supported by Palestinian activists, civil society, and trade unions, some see the movement as the nonviolent solution to ending occupation in a political climate where Palestinians are accused of using violence to achieve their goals. Others see the movement as hardline and militant despite its nonviolent strategies. Pro-Israel group The AntiDefamation League claims that “the BDS campaign is a global effort to isolate and punish Israel because of its policies towards the Palestinians” that “place[s] the entire onus of the conflict on one side: the Israelis.” Opposition to the movement by the Israeli rightwing is self-evident, but opposition to BDS is shared by liberal Zionists alike. J Street, a self-described liberal


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