The law is a potential site for socio-political contestation. Legal systems may be open to competing interpretations and applications, because they are not necessarily coherent, and abstract legal concepts are not necessarily determinate. Nevertheless, the ability of legal actors to destabilize (or stabilize) legal categories and expose the incoherence of the legal system (or to present it as coherent) depends on the availability of maneuvering space and on the actors' willingness and ability to do the necessary work to achieve these effects (Kennedy 2008). Therefore, in order to examine the law's role in a particular country, one has to take into account not only the letter of the law, but also its judicial interpretations and applications as well as its effects in a particular context. Israeli law, the subject of this chapter, is not monolithic. Zionist ideology influences Israeli law, but ideologies are rarely homogenous, and different actors within legal systems strive to advance their own conceptions and interests. Yet, an examination of the role of the legal system since Israel's inception reveals that far from significantly challenging power structures, Israeli law effectively created a hierarchy among Israeli citizens. As I show here, it generally advanced, justified, and perpetuated a separate and inferior status for the Palestinian citizens in Israel. At the same time, it granted the Israeli regime an aura of legitimacy by containing its practices under the "rule of law." Ultimately, although the legal system has a moderating effectbecause it often pushes the political system toward the political centerthis center itself has been moving toward the right-wing continuum of the Zionist movement. The chapter is organized as follows: Part I examines the conventional story about the rise of constitutionalism and judicial activism in Israel. I question the analytical utility of this story in evaluating the role of law in Israeli society. The chapter shows that, at the legal structures of subordination