Políticas do testemunho: uma análise etnográfica do Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI)

This dissertation is an ethnographic analysis of the Ecumenical Accompaniment Program in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI), a human rights program created in 2002 by the European Christian organization World Council of Churches (WCC). It addresses the way in which, from what would have been the “Jerus...

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Autor principal: Ratto, Michelle Julianne Souza
Outros Autores: Navia, Ângela Mercedes Facundo
Formato: Dissertação
Idioma:pt_BR
Publicado em: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte
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Endereço do item:https://repositorio.ufrn.br/handle/123456789/31393
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Resumo:This dissertation is an ethnographic analysis of the Ecumenical Accompaniment Program in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI), a human rights program created in 2002 by the European Christian organization World Council of Churches (WCC). It addresses the way in which, from what would have been the “Jerusalem call” for Christians to go to the “Holy Land” to see the daily lives of Palestinians under Israeli military occupation, the WCC/EAPPI becomes part of a complex of humanitarian and solidarity organizations established in the occupied West Bank in the period of the second Intifada. To this end, it operates under the continuous sending of international volunteers under the official name of "Ecumenical Accompaniers" (EAs) to act as "observers" of human rights, providing what would be a "protective international presence", “accompaniment” and "monitoring" of cases of human rights violations. Thus, the dissertation analyzes, from former Brazilian participants, the discursive dispositif mobilized by the WCC/EAPPI in the production of a testimony policy on the “Israeli-Palestinian conflict”.