Skip to Content

Morad Elsana

This individual is a guest contributor. MEI is not able to assist with contact requests.

Morad Elsana

Dr. Morad Elsana is an expert in human rights law and Arab world studies, and teaches at the American University. He is a qualified Israeli lawyer originally from the Bedouin town of Lakiya in the Negev, and currently lives in the Washington, D.C. area. He is the founder of Alhuquq Center for Human Rights and has recently finished a major book on the land rights of the Negev Bedouin.

The Latest from Morad Elsana

Filter by
3 Results
The judicial “reform” will make things worse, but Israel’s Supreme Court has long failed Palestinian citizens
Photo by Matan Golan/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The judicial “reform” will make things worse, but Israel’s Supreme Court has long failed Palestinian citizens

    Over the past several months, the eyes of the world have been on the massive demonstrations in Israel against the Netanyahu government’s proposed judicial “reform.” Even though Palestinian citizens of Israel are likely to be the group most affected by the proposed changes, they have been notable for their absence, for the most part, from the protests. While Jewish citizens are worried about what the proposed changes might mean for Israel’s judiciary and the future of its democracy, the Supreme Court and the legal system more broadly have long failed to protect the rights of the country’s Palestinian citizens.

    April 17, 2023

    After 18 years, Palestinian families can finally live together: The end of Israel’s 2003 citizenship law
    Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • After 18 years, Palestinian families can finally live together: The end of Israel’s 2003 citizenship law

    The expiration of Israel’s 2003 citizenship law early last month has finally ended the suffering of roughly 30,000 Palestinian families and paved the way for their reunification. Despite the efforts of the Zionist political parties to renew the law, the abstention from voting of the two Arab Palestinian Knesset members from the United Arab List — which, for the first time, is represented in Israel’s new coalition government — blocked the majority needed to extend the long-standing “temporary” law, which subsequently expired on July 6. While this is welcome news for many Palestinian families, the defeat of this notorious law is by no means a panacea. Until there is real change in Israel, Palestinians, both those who are citizens of Israel as well as those in the occupied territories, will continue to face legal obstacles when it comes to obtaining their basic rights.

    August 10, 2021

    Left to fend for themselves, Israel’s Bedouin are struggling with COVID-19
    A picture of a Bedouin village in Israel.
  • Analysis
  • Left to fend for themselves, Israel’s Bedouin are struggling with COVID-19

    The COVID-19 pandemic is impacting all communities in Israel, but it has hit some of them much harder than others. The plight of the Haredim (ultra-Orthodox Jews) has been widely publicized, but the Bedouin of the Negev Desert are also being devastated by the pandemic and no one seems to care.

    October 29, 2020