Financialising the Frontier

Harish City

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

G. Schwake (TU Delft - History, Form & Aesthetics)

Research Group
History, Form & Aesthetics
Copyright
© 2020 G. Schwake
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cities.2020.102945
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 G. Schwake
Research Group
History, Form & Aesthetics
Volume number
107
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Abstract

Housing and settlement played a key role in the formation of an Israeli society and its territorial project. While earlier frontier settlement relied on the rural sector and on peripheral development towns, with the liberalisation and privatisation of the local economy it was incorporated in the nationwide suburbanisation process. Eventually, with the neoliberal turn, the state sought to redirect investors, entrepreneurs, developers, and families to frontier areas by creating a real estate market and thus financialising the national territorial enterprise. This paper focuses on Harish, a rapidly developing housing project on the border with the occupied Palestinian West-Bank (the Green-Line). Presenting the geopolitical and societal interests behind its development, as well as the transformations its planning processes went through, this paper shows how the state was able to financialise its frontier and to eventually domesticate its border area. Analysing the spatial characteristics of Harish, this paper explains how the built environment functioned both as the medium and outcome of the alliance between national interests and market economy, merging financial frontiers with economic ones.