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<title>FAFO Report 151</title>

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<P>
<H2>Urban-Rural Disparities</H2>

The social structure of the population in the occupied territories exhibits
considerable differentiation between the urban and rural sections, as well
as within village and urban societies. Rural differentiation is high in
Gaza where large citrus plantations (now in decline) used to employ the
bulk of the agricultural labour force as wage workers.<a href="1_notes.html#5"><SUP>5</SUP></a> The West Bank, by
comparison, is, as a rural society, dominated by a smallholding peasant
population and very few big landholdings (concentrated mostly in the Jordan
Valley). Average landholdings per rural household is less than 50 dunums
(this category includes 84% of all landholders, and covers 34% of all possessed
land).<a href="1_notes.html#6"><SUP>6</SUP></a> On the other extreme we observe that less than 1% of holders possess
38% of the land, with holdings in excess of 100 dunums each.
<p>

<a name="1.1"><i>Table 1.1 The West Bank and the Gaza Strip Disparities in Socio-Economic Structure</i></a>
<p>

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<tr align=left><td></td><td>Social Feature</td><td>Gaza District</td><td>The West Bank</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>1</td><td>Population Density</td><td>Very high (1400/sq km)</td><td>Low density (135/sq km)</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>2</td><td>Ratio of rural to urban population</td><td>About 20% of total population</td><td>62% of total population</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>3</td><td>Distribution of urban population</td><td>Concentrated in one major urban conurbation (Gaza)</td><td>11 urban centres medium-sized (35-90,000 each)</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>4</td><td>Distribution of rural population</td><td>8 refugee camps, and 9 villages</td><td>430 villages</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>5</td><td>Mode of agriculture</td><td>Irrigated (48%) Wage labour predominant</td><td>Rain-fed agric. (95% of land), small farmers</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>6</td><td>Land tenure</td><td>Large and medium-sized plantations</td><td>Medium and small-sized owned plots</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>7</td><td>Social stratification</td><td>Sharp class and social disparities</td><td>Relative social homogeneity</td></tr>
<tr align=left><td>8</td><td>Refugees as a % of total population</td><td>63%</td><td>18%</td></tr>
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<font size=-1>Sources: (1) K. Nakhleh and E. Zureik, (eds.) <i>Sociology of the Palestinians</i> (London, l980); (2) Sarah Roy, <i>The Gaza Survey</i> (Jerusalem, l986); (3) <i>Statistical Abstract of Israel</i>, no. 38 (Jerusalem, l987); Lisa Taraki (ed.) <i>Palestinian Society in the West Bank and Gaza</i>, (Akka, 1990); M. Benvenisti and S. Khayat, <i>The West Bank and Gaza Atlas</i> (Jerusalem, l989); FAFO Household Survey (Oslo and Jerusalem, 1993).<br>

Note: The reader will notice some discrepancy between some of the data above and those in the survey. Those discrepancies are primarily due to conceptual differences in the definition of social categories (e.g. what is urban and rural) by the several authors listed above.
</font>

<P>
When examining sources of income in this survey the reader should note that,
for dry farming land, any cultivated area under 100 dunums would be used
for subsistence and marginal farming. Hence the extent of agricultural disparities
is less than would seem to be indicated by the figures. Ownership of irrigated
land, on the other hand (which constitutes less than 5% of total arable
land), would indicate greater disparities.

<P>
There is considerable urbanization among Palestinians by the standards of
developing countries. Our survey suggests that 60% of the Palestinians in
the three regions under study live in urban areas (see also chapter 2 on
Population). But there are significant contrasts within the three regions.
For the West Bank, 1987 Israeli data suggests that 47% of the population
live in urban areas, distributed in 11 townships, the average size of which
is 43,000 inhabitants.<a href="1_notes.html#7"><SUP>7</SUP></a> The household survey identifies 62% of West Bankers
as 'rural' (living in over 400 villages and rural refugee camps). However,
there is an uneven dispersal of the urban population, with fully 75% of
those concentrated in 3 major conurbations: Nablus, Hebron, and the greater
Jerusalem area (including Bethlehem and Ramallah-Bireh). Almost all West
Bank towns act as centres of services and retail trade for their rural hinterlands,
and are noted for their small, and weak, manufacturing sector (with the
average employment per establishment amounting to 4.28 persons).<a href="1_notes.html#8"><SUP>8</SUP></a> Over the
last few decades there has been a steady and even growth in the size of
rural and urban localities due to the proximity of district centres to satellite
villages.<a href="1_notes.html#9"><SUP>9</SUP></a> The main social divide within the townships continues to be the
one found between refugee camp dwellers and residents outside these camps.

<P>
By contrast Gaza is overwhelmingly urban, with 75-80% of the population
living in the Gaza-Khan Yunis-Rafah conurbations. Gaza is also distinguished
by the preponderance of its refugee population, constituting 2/3 of the
total, of which about 1/3 are camp dwellers. Within all of the Palestinian
regions only 18% of the population live in refugee camps.

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