Diana B. Greenwald is an assistant professor of political science at the City College of New York.
With nuance, rigor, and fascinating revelations based on original data collected in the West Bank, Greenwald offers an analysis of how Palestinian mayors navigate the challenges of being stuck in the “middle” of Israeli occupation, Palestinian nationalist aspirations, and the pragmatic needs of local constituency. Her book is the first comprehensive account of how these ‘mayors in the middle’ develop a political logic for survival, that avoids both full cooperation with the Israeli government and complete defection from Palestinian parties such that they may still meet the practical needs of civic life in the West Bank. Using deeply moving interviews and granular local election data, the book is a valuable contribution to the field of Palestinian studies and the thriving body of political research on comparative local governance strategies. -- Nadya Hajj, author of <i>Networked Refugees: Palestinian Reciprocity and Remittances in the Digital Age</i> In a work of meticulous scholarship, Greenwald uses 'indirect rule,' both historically and theoretically, to offer an unprecedented study of municipal governance in the Israel-dominated West Bank. She complements a thorough quantitative analysis of revenue and spending patterns with fascinating accounts of in-depth interviews. Her volume documents the corrupting results of Israel’s instrumentalization of the Palestinian Authority while explaining surprising successes Hamas-affiliated mayors and local councils have had in mobilizing their constituencies. This valuable book highlights both the barriers to Palestinian agency and its potential. -- Ian Lustick, author of <i>Paradigm Lost: From Two-State Solution to One-State Reality</i>