Security as care: communitarianism, social reproduction and gender in southern Israel

Security as care: communitarianism, social reproduction and gender in southern Israel

By: Aharoni S.B., Sa’ar A., Lewin A.C.
Published in: Feminist Theory
SDGs : SDG 05  |  Units: Social Sciences  | Time: 2021 |  Link
Description: The article engages with feminist care theories and practices of community building in the context of armed conflict. Ba sed on an ethnographic study (2016–2018) of the security concerns of Israeli citizens living in the Gaza Envelope and their positions regarding the siege on Gaza, we find that in this region, vernacular security is closely linked with care, social reproduction and communitarianism. Communitarian ethics is intertwined with separatist, state-centred discourses on national ‘trauma and resilience’. In this context, Jewish-Israeli women care for their own communities as a way to ensure survival and civilian resilience. They generally disengage from moral dilemmas concerning the suffering of Palestinians. On a deeper level, the practice of security as care combines the hegemonic Israeli security paradigm of women’s soldierhood with an institutional and cultural obsession with trauma-oriented activities. Showing strong ethno-nationalist identifications, these women tend to overlook and even support the state’s violent siege on Gaza, which is seen as a zero-sum game. We conclude that the gendered dimensions of communitarian ethics in Israel are relevant for understanding the limitations and challenges of contemporary cosmopolitan feminism and a global politics of care. © The Author(s) 2021.