“…In the existing literature within geography and cognate disciplines debates on acceleration and speed have been spread around vast range of topics, including the planetary-wide logistical networks (Cowen, 2010), time-space compression (Harvey, 1989), technological speed of globalisation (Joronen, 2008), colonization (Luke and Tuathail, 2000), capitalist logics and fascist politics of acceleration (Noys, 2014), and the more specific questions of speed related to, for instance, deceleration, futurism, algorithms, urban planning, warfare and revolutionary acceleration (e.g., Armitage, 1999;Deleuze and Guattari, 1987;Grindsted, 2015;Leach, 1999;Virilio, 2006). Within the literature focusing explicitly on Palestine/Israel, the notion of speed has most often been approached in terms of slow violence and purposely inefficient legal and administrative processes that have effectively stolen Palestinians' time by keeping them waiting under highly restrictive and vulnerable conditions (e.g., Berda, 2017;Joronen, 2017Joronen, , 2021Peteet, 2017). Acceleration, in turn, has been less often taken under explicit focus, though it has been mentioned in relation to infrastructural/architectonic ways of speeding up separatory politics (Jabary-Salamanca, 2016;Weizman, 2007), and indicated by works focusing on more abrupt events of spectacular violence (Azoulay and Ophir, 2009).…”