“…Across this work, a detailed picture of spatial segregation emerges, or specifically how colonial space is multiple and mutable. Depending on which parts of Palestine they live in, Palestinians are severely restricted in movement (Griffiths & Repo, 2020Hammami, 2015Hammami, , 2019Rijke & Minca, 2018Tawil-Souri, 2009; facing forced displacements and demolitions of their homes (Harker, 2009;Joronen & Griffiths, 2019;Shalhoub-Kevorkian, 2009); under the surveillance of settler civil society (Griffiths, 2023;Medien, 2023); caught within uncertain bureaucratic and juridical processes (Berda, 2017;Joronen, 2017b); military practices of (non) 'ethical' operations (Jones, 2023;Puar, 2017); dedevelopment (Roy, 1999;Smith, 2016); infrastructure and practices of urban land grabbing (Alkhalili, 2017a(Alkhalili, , 2017bAlkhalili et al, 2014;Joudah, 2020;Porter & Yiftachel, 2017;Salamanca & Silver, 2022); an assault on the animating function of hope and future (Abu Hatoum, 2021;Amir, 2021;Hassouna, 2024;Meneley, 2021); the more-than-human geographies of subjugation (Bishara et al, 2021;Braverman, 2021Braverman, , 2023Griffiths, 2022;Joronen, 2023;Stamatopoulou-Robbins, 2022); and a general suppression of Palestinian political and cultural expression (Alqaisiya, 2018;Järvi, 2023). If here we are reference-heavy, it is in the service of collating reading resources that can contribute to a decolonial politics that is informed through robust geographical inquiry.…”