This topic explores how Israel has used Jewish settlement as a pivotal strategy to control, disrupt, and radically transform the Jerusalem geopolitical landscape. Launched directly after Israeli's occupation of the city in 1967, the process of settlement building is fundamentally predicated on the dispossession of Palestinians and the destruction of their collective fabric and communal capacity—cities, villages, neighborhoods, and individual homes.
Featured in This Topic
Israel brings new displacement mechanisms to bear in Sheikh Jarrah.
Israel approves major controversial settlement plan east of Jerusalem that splits West Bank, seizing its heart.
How privatizing “security” ensures that only one population is secured
A collaboration becomes a symbiosis.
A new assault on the Palestinian neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah
The Umm Haroun neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah is threatened.
Sheikh Jarrah is being besieged.
A new segregated highway will annex part of the occupied West Bank and sever Palestinian access to this area.
Not just a road, the newly approved highway extension has dire geostrategic consequences for Palestinians.
A new demographically motivated bill seeks to fulfill the vision of a greater (Jewish) Jerusalem
An interactive map of the greater Jerusalem region, strengthening the connection between the urban core and the settlement periphery
A newly approved settlement southwest of Jerusalem would drive a stake through the heart of any future Palestinian state.
How the City of David Foundation distorts the narrative of archaeological sites in Silwan
Israel’s most recent settlement proposal in East Jerusalem would further cut off the city from the remainder of the West Bank.
Israel is rapidly advancing settlement plans across East Jerusalem; 2023 seems sure to be a record-breaking year.
The Story in Numbers
150
Number of state-authorized settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem [1]
140
Number of settlement outposts in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem [2]
15
Number of state-authorized settlements within the Israeli boundaries of East Jerusalem [3]
680,000+
The Israeli settler population across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as of 2022 [4]
350,000+
A conservative estimate of the Israeli settler population in the larger Jerusalem region (more than 50 percent of the total Israeli settler population in the West Bank) [5]
220,000+
The Israeli settler population within the Israeli-imposed Jerusalem municipal boundaries (approximately a third of the total settler population in the West Bank) [6]
35
Percentage of Palestinian-owned lands of the area of occupied East Jerusalem (within the municipal boundaries) that Israel has expropriated for Jewish settlements [7]
13
Percentage of the land of the area of occupied East Jerusalem (within the municipal boundaries) that Israel has allotted to Palestinian use, despite their being nearly 40 percent of the population [8]
Notes
[1] This number is based on a cross-check calculation using the following sources: Mohammed Haddad, “Mapping Israeli Occupation,” Al Jazeera, May 18, 2021; Charlie Hoyle, “Interactive Timeline: The History of Israeli Settlements since 1967,” The New Arab, November 20, 2019; “Jerusalem,” Peace Now; “Settlements,” B’Tselem, January 16, 2019.
[2] This number is based on a cross-check calculation using the following sources: Haddad, "Mapping Israeli Occupation"; Hoyle, “Interactive Timeline”; “Jerusalem”; “Settlements.”
[3] See The Three Israeli Settlement Rings in and around East Jerusalem: Supplanting Palestinian Jerusalem, Table 1.
[4] Haddad, “Mapping Israeli Occupation.”
[5] Based on numbers from Haddad, “Mapping Israeli Occupation”; Hoyle, “Interactive Timeline.”
[6] Haddad, “Mapping Israeli Occupation.”
[7] “Israeli Settlements and International Law,” Amnesty International, 2019.
[8] “Israeli Settlements and International Law.”
