This complete, interactive map of the West Bank and Gaza includes information about Palestinian communities and Israeli settlements, checkpoints, the separation barrier, agricultural gates in the separation barrier, settlement zones in East Jerusalem, etc. Plus ongoing B’Tselem reports and video clips, organized by location.
Maps
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This comprehensive map depicts the updated route of the separation barrier, checkpoints, Palestinian localities, and settlements and settlement outposts in the West Bank.
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The map shows the various categories of land off-limits to Palestinian constructions and development: Areas under the jurisdiction of settlements’ Local and District Councils, state land, firing zones, nature reserves and national parks. More on the topic
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The map shows the area surrounding the settlement of Ma’ale Adumim, the route of the Separation Barrier that creates an enclave linking the settlement to Israel, and the E1 compound where Israel is planning construction to achieve a contiguous built-up bloc connecting Ma’ale Adumim to Jerusalem. More on the topic
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The map shows the Palestinian villages and the Jewish settlements in the southern West Bank. The area marked in red is home to about 1,000 Palestinians, who live in caves and maintain a traditional lifestyle. In the 1970s this are was declared by the Israeli military commander a "closed military area,". Since 1999, Israel has been trying to expel the inhabitants. More on the topic.
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Israel prohibits Palestinians from using most of the lands of the Jordan Valley and the northern Dead Sea on a variety of pretexts: state land, closed military areas, nature reserves and areas under the jurisdiction of settlements’ Local and District Councils. All told, after deducting for overlap in these categories, roughly 85 percent of the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea are off limits to construction and development by Palestinians. This policy breaks up Palestinian territory and isolates Palestinian communities in the area. More on the topic
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Map showing the restriction on movement of Palestinians and opening of businesses in Hebron's center. More on the topic
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This map depicts the route of the separation barrier, including the changes made to the route of the barrier adjacent to the Palestinian communities of Wadi Rasha, Jayyus and Bil’in as of June 2011. More on the topic
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This comprehensive map depicts the updated route of the separation barrier, checkpoints, Palestinian localities, and settlements and settlement outposts in the West Bank.
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A collection of maps depicting the growth in size and population, and the private Palestinian ownership of land in a number of West Bank settlements. More on the topic
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Map showing the restriction on movement of Palestinians and opening of businesses in Hebron's center. More on the topic
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Map depicting the result of restrictions on movement that Israel has imposed on Palestinians in the West Bank, that split the area into six major geographical units: North, Center, South, the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea, the enclaves resulting from the Separation Barrier, and East Jerusalem. More on the topic
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Map of the Gaza Strip before disengagement, March 2005
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The map shows the Palestinian villages and the Jewish settlements in the southern West Bank. The area marked in red is home to about 1,000 Palestinians, who live in caves and maintain a traditional lifestyle. In the 1970s this are was declared by the Israeli military commander a "closed military area,". Since 1999, Israel has been trying to expel the inhabitants. More on the topic
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The map depicts Israeli settlement blocks in the Gaza Strip before the implementation of Israel’s disengagement plan in Aug 2005. More on the topic
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The map displays the Israeli policy of prohibiting and restricting Palestinian travel on West Bank roads as documented in August 2004. More on the topic
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Produced in 2002, this is the first map of its kind to display the built-up areas, and municipal and regional boundaries of Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Israel has established in the Occupied Territories a separation cum discrimination regime, in which it maintains two systems of laws, and a person’s rights are based on his or her national origin. More on the topic
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Map of the route approved by the Israeli government on April 30 2006. More on the topic





















