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Bedouin
The Bedouin, (from the Arabic 'badū), are a predominantly desert-dwelling Arab ethnic group (previously nomadic, presently settled) found throughout most of the desert belt extending from the Atlantic coast of the Sahara via the Western Desert, Sinai, and Negev to the Arabian Desert. Non-Arab groups as well, notably the Beja of the African coast of the Red Sea, are sometimes called Bedouin.
Bedouin
Negev
Negev (also Negeb; , Tiberian vocalization:desert and semidesert region of southern Israel. The indigenous Bedouin inhabitants of the region refer to the desert as al-Naqab (). The origin of the word Negev is from the Hebrew root denoting 'dry'. In the Bible the word Negev is also used for the direction 'south'.
Negev
Arab citizens of Israel
Arab_citizens_of_Israel
Bustan
for the town in Uzbekistan see Bustan, Uzbekistan Bustan, is a Negev environmental justice organization in Israel fighting for the rights of desert residents, officially established as a non-profit in 2006. According to Bustan, the organization uses hands-on environmental education as a tool to facilitate citizen investment in building sustainable relations amongst themselves and with the land and its resources.
Bustan
Israel and the apartheid analogy
The State of Israel's treatment of the Palestinians has been likened by some to a system of apartheid, analogous to South Africa's treatment of non-whites during its apartheid era. Those who use this analogy argue that a system of control including separate roads, inequities in infrastructure, legal rights, and access to land and resources between Palestinians and Israeli residents in the Israeli-occupied territories constitutes an apartheid system.
Israel_and_the_apartheid_analogy
Yosef Weitz
Yosef Weitz (1890 Jewish National Fund. From the 1930s, Weitz played a major role in acquiring land for the Yishuv, the pre-state Jewish community in Palestine.
Yosef_Weitz
Negev Bedouin
The Negev Bedouin (, Badū an-Naqab) are traditionally pastoral semi-nomadic Arab tribes indigenous to the Negev region in Israel, who hold close ties to the Bedouin of the Sinai Peninsula. The forced alteration of their traditional lifestyle has led to sedentarization.
Negev_Bedouin
Environmental impact of oil shale industry
Environmental impact of oil shale industry includes the consideration of issues such as land use, waste management, and water and air pollution. Surface mining of oil shale deposits has all the environmental impacts of open-pit mining. In addition, the combustion and thermal processing generate waste material, which must be disposed of, and harmful atmospheric emissions, including carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas.
Environmental_impact_of_oil_shale_industry
Wadi al-Na'am
Wadi al-Na'am is an unrecognized village in the Negev/Naqab Desert in Southern Israel. The nearest official settlement is Beersheba. The village is home to about 5,000 Bedouin that live mainly in tents and tin shacks less than 500 meters away from a toxic waste dump, largely surrounded by the Ramat Hovav industrial zone and military areas including an Israel Defense Forces live-fire range.
Wadi_al-Na'am
Jaakobou/Archive 2
User_talk:Jaakobou/Archive_2
Mount Hebron
Talk:Mount_Hebron
Ramat Hovav
Ramat Hovav () is an industrial zone in southern Israel, as well as Israel's main hazardous waste disposal facility, built in the Negev Desert in 1979. The nearest village is the largest unrecognized Bedouin village in the Negev Desert, Wadi el-Na'am, directly adjacent, and the nearest city is the regional population center of Beer Sheva, 12 kilometers away.In addition to housing the National Site for Treatment of Hazardous Waste (the only approved center for hazardous waste in the country) the Ramat Hovav Industrial Zone is the locus of 19 chemical factories, concentrating over half of Israel’s chemical plants on its .
Ramat_Hovav
Blueprint Negev
Blueprint Negev is a $600 million project of the Jewish National Fund (JNF) to develop the Negev region of Israel through the construction of new settlements for immigrants and Israelis from the center of the country. The project says it will increase the Negev's population by 250,000 new residents by 2013, improving transportation infrastructure, adding businesses and employment opportunities, preserving water resources and protecting its environment.
Blueprint_Negev
Devorah Brous
Devorah Brous is the founder of the environmental justice organization BUSTAN, focused on Bedouin communities in the Negev Desert of Israel. She moved to Israel in 1993 from New Jersey, where she was brought up in a Reconstructionist religious household, with a strongly Zionist ideological outlook. She began to engage in peace work several years after her arrival, running Jordandirect action, running work camps with the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions.
Devorah_Brous
Unrecognized villages
The term unrecognized village refers to a Bedouin village in the Negev Desert which the Israeli government does not recognize as a legal settlement. Approximately half of Bedouin citizens of Israel live in 39-45 such villages. According to the Israel Land Authority, in 2007 40% of the Bedouin lived in Unrecognized villages, although the Regional Council of Unrecognized Villages (RCUV) refers to Bedouin in unrecognized villages as half the Negev Bedouin population.
Unrecognized_villages
Allegations of Israeli apartheid/Archive 29
Talk:Allegations_of_Israeli_apartheid/Archive_29