Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 03/2013

The civil defence-civilian protection nexus in the Occupied Palestinian Territory

Riina Isotalo

January 2013

Norwegian Peacebuilding Resource Centre

Abstract

This report investigates the civil defence-civilian protection interface in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT). Findings show that international support to Palestinian civilians’ safety is divided along the lines of civilian protection and civil defence. There are also striking differences between the Gaza administration’s and the Palestinian Authority’s (PA) approach to the interface of civilian protection and civil defence. The former has an explicitly gendered view and integrates internal and external threats to safety. At present, the PA is committed to the Hyogo Framework of Action and its approach reflects the international aid policy approach. However, gendered examples suggest that the cultural value basis of civil defence is not very different in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Interviews with officials from West Bank municipalities show varying levels of awareness of civil defence law and national strategy, and variations in municipalities’ existing civil defence practices in the West Bank. Existing plans and policy documents focus on natural hazards and appear to be gender blind, which, in the light of past experiences in the OPT and elsewhere, may increase violence against women in emergency situations. The report concludes that the encouragement of communitybased emergency preparedness by the PA and the international community reflects the privatisation of important segments of safety and protection to families and households.