Professor
Maiengasse 51
4056 Basel
Schweiz
Falestin Naïli is a historian associated with the Institut français du Proche-Orient (Ifpo) in Amman. She specializes in the social history of late Ottoman and Mandate Palestine and Jordan and has focused much of her recent research on local governance and politics, particularly in Jerusalem. Through her interest in collective memory and oral history she often reaches present-time issues, including the politics of heritage and folklore.
She was a core team member of the ERC project « Opening Jerusalem’s Archives » before joining Ifpo Amman as a researcher and head of office between 2017 and 2020.
Her Ph.D. thesis, defended in Aix-en-Provence in 2007, deals with the history of the village of Artas south of Bethlehem in the second half of the 19th and the first half of the 20th century and with the collective memory of this period among villagers and descendants of Europeans who settled in the village. It will be published by Karthala (Paris) in 2022 under the title La Palestine entre Patrimoine et Providence : imaginaires bibliques et mémoire au village d’Artâs, XIX et XX siècles.
In her other publications, Falestin Naïli has dealt with urban governance in Jerusalem, millenarist settlement and missionary projects in Palestine, forced migration in the contemporary Middle East, early ethnographies of Palestine, and collective memory and heritage issues in these contexts.
In 2023, Dr. Falestin Naïli has received by Swiss National Science Foundation a Consolidator Grant, leading to her upcoming project "Futures Interrupted: social pluralism and political imaginaries beyond coloniality and the nation-state".
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