Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-cjp7w Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-04T22:02:25.553Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Social Security Programmes in the West Bank and Gaza Strip: Challenges for the new Palestine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2009

Abstract

Over the years during which Israel has occupied the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Palestinian economy has become heavily dependent on wages earned in Israel. Yet Israel has done relatively little to modernise these territories' social security arrangements, or to enable Palestinian frontier workers to benefit from its own social security system. This article compares the occupational welfare, public assistance and health insurance programmes in the three entities, and suggests how they could be better organised to protect Palestinian workers and their families against daily contingencies which can decimate their economic security.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Abu-Shukor, A. (1987), Socio-Economic Conditions of the West Bank and Gaza Strip Workers in Israel, Documentation, Transcripts and Publication Center, An-Najah National University, Nablus.Google Scholar
Bar-On, A. (1988), ‘Health insurance on the West Bank’, paper delivered at the Annual Conference of the Social Policy Association,University of Edinburgh, 07 1988.Google Scholar
Be'or, H. (1992), ‘Workers' Hotline: employers do not report as required on the employment of Palestinian workers’, Ha'aretz, 22 10.Google Scholar
Be'er, I. (1991), ‘Civil administration report: more than a million Palestinians on the (West) BankHa'aretz, 9 04.Google Scholar
DeWind, J. (1990), ‘Alien justice: the exclusion of Haitian refugees’, Journal of Social Issues, 46: 1, 121–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elayyan, N. (1989), ‘Social security in Jordan’, International Social Security Review, 42: 1, 8790.Google Scholar
Employment Service (1989) Circulars (Social Allowance Section), Nos. 28/89, 29/89 and 30/89 from 27 April.Google Scholar
Gabriel, S. A. and Sabatello, E. F. (1986), ‘Palestinian migration from the West Bank and Gaza: economic and demographic analyses’, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 34: 2, 245–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
International Labour Organization (1987), Report to the Director General, Appendices, International Labour Conference, 73th Session,Geneva.Google Scholar
International Labour Organization (1990), Report to the Director General, Appendices (Vol. 2). International Labour Conference, 77th Session,Geneva.Google Scholar
Kav, La'oved (Workers' Hotline) (1991), Newsletter, 03 1991.Google Scholar
La'or, M. (1986), The Labour of Workers from the Occupied Territories Employed through the Employment Service, Tel-Aviv: Social and Economic Institute, Committee for Arab Occupied Territory Affairs, General Federation of Labour in Israel (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Lewin-Epstein, N. and Semyonov, M. (1985), ‘Non-citizen Arabs in the Israeli labour market: entry and permeation’, Social Problems, 33: 1, 5666.Google Scholar
Milner, I. (1991), ‘They tried to get along without them, but did not succeed’, Ha'aretz, 17 05.Google Scholar
Ministry of Defense (1969), Two Years of Military Government 1967–1969, Coordinator of Government Operations in the Administered Territories, Tel-Aviv.Google Scholar
Ministry of Social Affairs (1980), ‘Regulations Regarding Public Assistance in the Occupied Territories’, Social Work Regulations, 3.15, 25 07 (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Ranney, S. and Kossaudji, S. (1983), ‘Profiles of temporary Mexican labour migrants to the U.S.: Population and Development Review, 9: 3, 475–93.Google Scholar
Ricq, C. (1981), Travelleurs Frontealiers en Eurpone: Essai de PoUtique Sociale et Regionale, Anthropos, Paris.Google Scholar
Uhler, O. M. et al. (1958), Commentary: Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War – Vol. IV, International Committee of the Red Cross, Geneva.Google Scholar
van Empel, M. et al. (eds.) (1990), leading Cases in the Laws of the European Communities, 5th edn, Deventer, Kluwer Law and Taxation Publishers.Google Scholar
Walzer, M. (1981), ‘The distribution of membership’, in Brown, P. G. and Shue, H. (eds.). Boundaries: National Autonomy and Its Limitations, Rowman and littlefield, Totown, NJ.Google Scholar