דר, שמעון (2002). "עדויות ארכאולוגיות למרידות השומרונים בתקופה הביזנטית" [Archaeological evidence of the Samaritan revolts in the Byzantine period]. In שטרן, אפרים; אשל, חנן (eds.). ספר השומרונים [Book of Samaritans] (in Hebrew). ירושלים: יד יצחק בן-צבי, רשות העתיקות. p. 431. ISBN9789652172020.
Marom, Roy; Adams, Matthew J.; Tepper, Yotam (2024). "The Mosque of Ibrahim: A 10th-Century Shrine at al-Lajjūn". Journal of Islamic Archaeology. 11 (2): 141. doi:10.1558/jia.28376. ISSN2051-9710.
Ha'aretzArchived 2009-12-12 at the Wayback Machine 17 March 2008 Court case reveals how settlers illegally grab West Bank lands By Meron Rapoport Zeev Mushinsky, the "land coordinator" at the Kedumim local council, testified as to how it works: Council employees, Mushinsky in this case, would map the "abandoned lands" around the settlements, even if they were outside the council's jurisdiction, with the aim of taking them over. The council would "allocate" the lands to settlers, who would sign an official form stating that they have no ownership claim on them, and that the council is entitled to evict them whenever it sees fit, in return for compensating them solely for their investment in cultivating the land. Kedumim's former security chief, Michael Bar-Neder, testified that the land "allocation" was followed by an effort to expand the settlement. Bar-Neder said that once the settlers seized the lands, an application would be made to the military commander to declare them state-owned, since under the law covering the West Bank, anyone who does not cultivate his land for three years forfeits ownership of it.
Ha'aretzArchived 2009-12-12 at the Wayback Machine 17 March 2008 Court case reveals how settlers illegally grab West Bank lands By Meron Rapoport Zeev Mushinsky, the "land coordinator" at the Kedumim local council, testified as to how it works: Council employees, Mushinsky in this case, would map the "abandoned lands" around the settlements, even if they were outside the council's jurisdiction, with the aim of taking them over. The council would "allocate" the lands to settlers, who would sign an official form stating that they have no ownership claim on them, and that the council is entitled to evict them whenever it sees fit, in return for compensating them solely for their investment in cultivating the land. Kedumim's former security chief, Michael Bar-Neder, testified that the land "allocation" was followed by an effort to expand the settlement. Bar-Neder said that once the settlers seized the lands, an application would be made to the military commander to declare them state-owned, since under the law covering the West Bank, anyone who does not cultivate his land for three years forfeits ownership of it.
Marom, Roy; Adams, Matthew J.; Tepper, Yotam (2024). "The Mosque of Ibrahim: A 10th-Century Shrine at al-Lajjūn". Journal of Islamic Archaeology. 11 (2): 141. doi:10.1558/jia.28376. ISSN2051-9710.