Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in Israel

Much has been written on the constitutional overhaul in Israel, and the attendant constitutional crisis in the first nine months of 2023. Since October 7, however, with the breakout of the Israel-Gaza war, the overhaul was seemingly shelved. This Article seeks to connect both events, by comparing th...

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Main Author: Adam Shinar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2025-02-01
Series:German Law Journal
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Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2071832224000373/type/journal_article
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author Adam Shinar
author_facet Adam Shinar
author_sort Adam Shinar
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description Much has been written on the constitutional overhaul in Israel, and the attendant constitutional crisis in the first nine months of 2023. Since October 7, however, with the breakout of the Israel-Gaza war, the overhaul was seemingly shelved. This Article seeks to connect both events, by comparing the legal-political response to the overhaul with the legal-political response to the war. It asks why, given the intensity of the protest movement generated by the overhaul, there was a dearth of protest activity after the war, even though both events implicated similar values, namely the rule of law and individual rights, championed by the protest movement. I argue that a central reason for the disparity cannot only be explained by the dynamics of war but also due to the tensions and complexities inherent in Israel’s self-professed constitutional identity as a Jewish and democratic state. In particular, I argue that anti-overhaul protests appealed to liberal universalist values to garner bipartisan support, with the effect of bypassing substantive issues such as the occupation of the Palestinian Territories and discrimination faced by Israeli Palestinians. This explains the lack of Arab participation in the protests, as many perceived them to be an internal Jewish Affair. Thus, when post-war repressive measures mostly affected Israeli Palestinians, the protest movement failed to rally in their support. Although anti-overhaul protests could have brought about greater liberal consolidation in Israel, the relative lack of post-war mobilization casts lingering doubts on the possibility of long-term consolidation of liberal values in Israel. Attempts to depoliticize the protests, while perhaps successful in warding off the overhaul, and though impressive on their own, have likely failed in instilling deeper, more resilient, liberal values in Israel.
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spelling doaj-art-0c4feb500af54b00b953a34cd5e9258f2025-08-20T02:28:27ZengCambridge University PressGerman Law Journal2071-83222025-02-012612110.1017/glj.2024.37Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in IsraelAdam Shinar0https://orcid.org/0009-0003-2260-5828Professor of Law, Reichman University, Herzliya, IsraelMuch has been written on the constitutional overhaul in Israel, and the attendant constitutional crisis in the first nine months of 2023. Since October 7, however, with the breakout of the Israel-Gaza war, the overhaul was seemingly shelved. This Article seeks to connect both events, by comparing the legal-political response to the overhaul with the legal-political response to the war. It asks why, given the intensity of the protest movement generated by the overhaul, there was a dearth of protest activity after the war, even though both events implicated similar values, namely the rule of law and individual rights, championed by the protest movement. I argue that a central reason for the disparity cannot only be explained by the dynamics of war but also due to the tensions and complexities inherent in Israel’s self-professed constitutional identity as a Jewish and democratic state. In particular, I argue that anti-overhaul protests appealed to liberal universalist values to garner bipartisan support, with the effect of bypassing substantive issues such as the occupation of the Palestinian Territories and discrimination faced by Israeli Palestinians. This explains the lack of Arab participation in the protests, as many perceived them to be an internal Jewish Affair. Thus, when post-war repressive measures mostly affected Israeli Palestinians, the protest movement failed to rally in their support. Although anti-overhaul protests could have brought about greater liberal consolidation in Israel, the relative lack of post-war mobilization casts lingering doubts on the possibility of long-term consolidation of liberal values in Israel. Attempts to depoliticize the protests, while perhaps successful in warding off the overhaul, and though impressive on their own, have likely failed in instilling deeper, more resilient, liberal values in Israel.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2071832224000373/type/journal_articleIsraelPalestineconstitutionGazademocracyliberalism
spellingShingle Adam Shinar
Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in Israel
German Law Journal
Israel
Palestine
constitution
Gaza
democracy
liberalism
title Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in Israel
title_full Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in Israel
title_fullStr Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in Israel
title_full_unstemmed Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in Israel
title_short Constitutional Overhaul, the War in Gaza, and the Puzzle of Civic Mobilization in Israel
title_sort constitutional overhaul the war in gaza and the puzzle of civic mobilization in israel
topic Israel
Palestine
constitution
Gaza
democracy
liberalism
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2071832224000373/type/journal_article
work_keys_str_mv AT adamshinar constitutionaloverhaulthewaringazaandthepuzzleofcivicmobilizationinisrael