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Antony Loewenstein
Antony Loewenstein
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Antony Loewenstein (born 1974) is a freelance investigative journalist, author, and film-maker based in Sydney. He covers the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and is known for his criticism of the treatment of Palestinians by the Israeli Government. His grandparents had escaped the Holocaust in Nazi Germany, but Loewenstein decided to take up German citizenship as an adult.

Key Information

His 2023 book, The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports the Technology of Occupation Around the World, won and was shortlisted for several global literary awards.

Early life and education

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Antony Loewenstein was born in Australia in 1974. His paternal grandparents left Germany and Austria just before World War II, but many members of their family had been killed in the Holocaust.[1]

Loewenstein became a German citizen, while maintaining Australian citizenship, as an adult in 2011, "as a way to rightfully re-claim our birthright", to honour his family that came from Germany, and to be allowed to work in European Union countries. However, he said in 2013 that he feels neither Australian nor German, describing himself as a "non-practising Jewish atheist currently based in Sydney".[1]

Career

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Loewenstein has written for a number of publications, including The Guardian,[2] and Sydney Morning Herald.[3]

Loewenstein contributed a chapter to Not Happy, John (2004) which highlighted the growing disenchantment with Australian prime minister John Howard. His 2006 book, My Israel Question, was a best-seller and short-listed for a 2007 New South Wales Premier's Literary Award. The book was criticised in a review in Australian Jewish News.[4]

He is the co-editor with Ahmed Moor of the 2012 book After Zionism: One State for Israel and Palestine which includes essays by Omar Barghouti, John Mearsheimer, Ilan Pappé, Sara Roy, and Jonathan Cook, among others.[5]

With South African film-maker Naashon Zalk, Loewenstein was co-director of a 2019 Al Jazeera English documentary on abuse of the opioid drug tramadol in Nigeria, West Africa's Opioid Crisis.[citation needed] He appears in the 2019 documentary, This Is Not A Movie, about The Independent's Middle East correspondent, Robert Fisk.[citation needed] His 2019 book, Pills, Powder and Smoke, is on the global "war on drugs".

Loewenstein co-founded Independent Australian Jewish Voices (IAJV).[6][7]

He won the 2019 Jerusalem (Al Quds) Peace Prize, one of Australia's leading peace awards, for his work on Israel/Palestine.[citation needed]

In 2021, he co-founded Declassified Australia with fellow journalist Peter Cronau. The news website critically reports on Australia's relations with the world.[8] He and UK film-maker Dan Davies co-directed the Al Jazeera documentary Under the Cover of Covid.[9][10]

In 2023, he published The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports The Technology Of Occupation Around The World, in the UK, US, and Australia, with multiple, translated editions. It was a long-list finalist in the 2023 Moore Prize For Human Rights Writing, and a best-selling book across the world.[11][12][13] In November 2023 Loewenstein was awarded, in partnership with Banki Haddock Fiora, the Walkley Book Award for Longform Journalism for the book.[14] The book won the People's Choice award[15] and was also shortlisted for the 2024 Victorian Premier's Prize for Nonfiction[16] and the Nonfiction Book Award at the 2024 Queensland Literary Awards.[17]

In 2024, he released a podcast series, The Palestine Laboratory, with the US outlet, Drop Site News.[citation needed]

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Antony Loewenstein (born 1974) is an Australian-German independent investigative journalist, author, and filmmaker of Jewish descent who has focused his career on critiquing Israeli policies toward Palestinians, the economics of disaster capitalism, and the international trade in surveillance and weapons technologies. Raised in a secular Jewish family in , Loewenstein describes himself as a Jewish atheist who became disillusioned with mainstream Jewish support for during his travels in and the Palestinian territories in the early 2000s. His early book, My Israel Question (2006), questioned Australian Jewish institutional allegiance to and argued that criticism of the state's actions does not equate to , a stance that led to his exclusion from some Jewish community events. Subsequent works, including the best-selling Disaster : Making a Killing from Catastrophe (2013) and The Laboratory: How Exports the Technology of Occupation Around the World (2023), examine how private firms profit from conflicts and how develops and markets crowd-control and tools refined in the occupied territories to authoritarian regimes globally. Loewenstein's reporting, published in outlets such as and , often highlights alleged Western media underreporting of Palestinian perspectives and has extended to documentaries like Disaster Capitalism (2015), co-produced with , which scrutinizes profit motives in post-disaster reconstructions in places like and . He co-founded the outlet Declassified Australia in 2019 to disclose classified documents on foreign policy, particularly arms exports and alliances with . His advocacy, including public statements linking Germany's historical guilt to its current support for , has sparked backlash from pro-Israel advocates who accuse him of selective outrage and fueling antisemitic tropes by portraying as uniquely predatory. In acquiring German citizenship in 2011 via ancestry—his paternal grandparents fled —Loewenstein has positioned himself as a bridge between critiques and European debates on memory and policy.

Personal Background

Early Life and Family History

Antony Loewenstein was born in , , in 1974 to a Jewish family. His upbringing occurred in a liberal Jewish household that observed traditions including and celebrations. He underwent a bar mitzvah at age 13. His father, Jeffrey Loewenstein, was born in Melbourne on March 3, 1943—the same date as Jeffrey's maternal grandparents. His mother, Violet Prince, maintained deep family connections to Austria, which was annexed by Nazi Germany in 1938. The family's European Jewish roots were decimated by , with most relatives perishing, including in Auschwitz. Loewenstein has recounted first noticing familial as a teenager during meals in . In adulthood, he became the first family member to visit ancestral locations in following the .

Education and Formative Influences

Antony Loewenstein was born in 1974 in and raised in in a liberal Jewish family whose members had emigrated from in 1939 to escape Nazi persecution. His upbringing included observance of such as and the , alongside an emphasis on Jewish unity in response to historical injustices. He attended a private Anglican school during the week and Jewish , where teachings reinforced a narrative of Jewish victimhood and support for , which he later began to question by drawing parallels to Australia's colonial history toward . During his university years, Loewenstein expanded his reading beyond traditional Jewish perspectives, becoming particularly influenced by Palestinian-American scholar , whose works critiqued and Western representations of the East. This period marked a shift toward and anti-Zionist views, shaped by a self-described conflicted identity incorporating , Germanic heritage from his grandparents, and Australian cultural elements. In his mid-20s, a visit to Auschwitz intensified his reevaluation of his heritage, prompting deeper scrutiny of Israel's policies and the narratives he had inherited. No formal university degree is publicly documented in available biographical sources, though Loewenstein later held honorary and research positions at institutions including and the . His formative intellectual development appears rooted more in independent reading and personal experiences than in structured academic credentials.

Professional Career

Journalism and Media Work

Antony Loewenstein has worked as an independent freelance investigative journalist for over two decades, contributing to numerous international outlets including The Guardian, The New York Times, Al Jazeera, and Australia's ABC. His reporting has often focused on conflict zones and underreported issues, with fieldwork in dozens of countries, including extended stays in South Sudan in 2015 and East Jerusalem. In 2021, Loewenstein co-founded Declassified Australia alongside journalist Peter Cronau, an independent outlet dedicated to exposing 's opaque foreign policy ties and intelligence operations through investigative pieces. By late 2022, the platform had published over 20 major stories, emphasizing transparency in government dealings without institutional affiliations. Loewenstein has appeared frequently in broadcast media, providing commentary on global affairs. Notable appearances include ABC TV's Compass in 2024 discussing Jewish identity and Zionism, ABC Radio National's Late Night Live in September 2025 on historical accountability in Germany, and interviews on Democracy Now! regarding WikiLeaks and Julian Assange's 2024 release. He has also featured on Australian community radio such as Triple R and international programs like Novara Media, often critiquing mainstream media narratives on topics like the Israel-Palestine conflict.

Authorship and Key Publications

Antony Loewenstein debuted as an author with My Israel Question in 2006, published by Melbourne University Press, which reframes the - conflict through an Australian Jewish lens, addressing Zionist and media coverage while incorporating on-the-ground reporting from . The book, updated in subsequent editions including 2009, sparked public debate and was short-listed for the 2007 NSW Premier’s Literary Award. In 2008, Loewenstein published The Blogging Revolution with Melbourne University Press, analyzing how bloggers in countries like , , , and circumvent state to expose government abuses, critiquing Western support for authoritarian regimes. An updated edition appeared in 2011. Loewenstein edited Profits of Doom in 2010 (updated 2014), published by Melbourne University Press, compiling essays on vulture capitalism's role in privatized conflicts, resource extraction, and economic exploitation in regions including and . The volume challenges corporate-driven models of disaster profiteering through case studies of and firms. Disaster Capitalism: Making a Killing Out of Catastrophe, released in 2013 (Verso hardcover 2015), documents how private corporations capitalize on global crises via privatized detention centers, security contracts, and reconstruction in countries such as , , and , based on Loewenstein's fieldwork. A followed in 2017. In 2019, Pills, Powder and Smoke: Inside the Bloody appeared via Scribe Publications, critiquing the global prohibition regime's failures through reporting from , , and the , advocating and amid of mass incarceration and . Loewenstein's most recent major work, The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports the Technology of Occupation Around the World (2023, Verso), investigates Israel's development and global sale of , AI, and weaponry tested in occupied Palestinian territories, drawing on leaked documents and interviews to trace exports to authoritarian states. The became a , translated into multiple languages. He has also co-edited volumes like Left Turn (2012, Melbourne University Press), essays on post-financial crisis progressive alternatives, and After Zionism (2013, Saqi Books), advocating a for and via contributed analyses.

Filmmaking and Documentary Projects

Loewenstein entered through collaborative investigative projects that extend his journalistic work into visual media, often examining corporate exploitation, militarized technologies, and geopolitical dynamics. His debut feature-length , Disaster Capitalism, released in 2018 and directed by Thor Neureiter, investigates the intersection of aid, disaster response, and profiteering by corporations in post-crisis environments such as , , and . In the film, Loewenstein serves as co-investigator and narrator, exposing how firms like , , and derive revenue from privatized detention and services amid humanitarian crises, drawing from his related of the same name. The project, developed over six years, premiered at festivals, screened on European television, and debuted in the United States at in March 2018. In 2025, Loewenstein created the documentary series The Laboratory, which scrutinizes Israel's development and global export of surveillance, weapons, and crowd-control technologies tested in the occupied Palestinian territories. The first episode, focused on weapons systems, aired on January 30, 2025, highlighting Israel's use of Gaza and the as a "" for innovations later marketed to authoritarian regimes and police forces worldwide. The series, produced in alignment with Loewenstein's 2023 book of the same title, was short-listed for the Walkley Awards in October 2025, recognizing Australian excellence. That same year, Loewenstein released Germany’s Israel Obsession, a one-hour film premiering on on September 11, 2025, in collaboration with Black Leaf Films and director Dan Davies. The documentary critiques 's staunch support for , arguing it fosters anti-Palestinian and overlooks historical context in addressing anti-Semitism. Loewenstein positions the work as an examination of state-backed narratives and their implications for free speech and memory politics in .

Core Views and Positions

Stance on Israel-Palestine Conflict

Antony Loewenstein, an Australian-Jewish , has positioned himself as a prominent critic of and Israeli policies toward , advocating for equal rights in historic . Raised in a Zionist family with survivor roots, he began publicly questioning Israel's actions in his 2006 book My Israel Question, which challenged the dominant pro-Israel narrative among Australian Jews and highlighted what he described as Israel's occupation and treatment of as central to understanding the conflict. In this work and subsequent writings, Loewenstein argued that uncritical support for ignores empirical evidence of settlement expansion, military operations, and , drawing on his visits to the and Gaza starting in the early 2000s. Loewenstein's opposition to Zionism crystallized in his self-identification as an anti-Zionist, rejecting the concept of a that privileges Jews over non-Jews between the and the . He co-edited After Zionism (2008), a collection of essays exploring alternatives to the two-state model, including a that would grant equal citizenship and rights to all inhabitants regardless of ethnicity or religion. This stance emphasizes dismantling what he terms Israel's "architecture of control," including checkpoints, walls, and surveillance systems imposed since the 1967 occupation, which he contends violate and perpetuate inequality. In The Palestine Laboratory (2023), Loewenstein detailed how has utilized the occupied territories as a real-world testing ground for weapons, drones, and biometric technologies, subsequently exporting them to authoritarian regimes worldwide for profit. He cited specific examples, such as the use of facial recognition in and armed robots along the Gaza fence, arguing these practices refine methods of population control that exacerbate Palestinian disenfranchisement. Following the October 7, 2023, attacks and 's subsequent Gaza operations, Loewenstein condemned the response as disproportionate, labeling it genocidal based on casualty figures exceeding 40,000 by mid-2024 and widespread infrastructure destruction, while criticizing for downplaying Palestinian perspectives due to institutional biases favoring . Loewenstein has repeatedly characterized as an apartheid state, pointing to legal disparities in the —such as separate roads and judicial systems for versus —and the denial of voting rights to millions under Israeli control. He supports (BDS) against as a non-violent pressure tactic akin to anti-apartheid efforts in , and has expressed solidarity with Palestinian resistance while distinguishing it from targeting civilians. Despite accusations from pro-Israel groups of sympathizing with designated terrorist organizations, Loewenstein maintains his critiques stem from first-hand reporting and data on power imbalances, not endorsement of violence.

Critiques of Capitalism and Corporate Power

Loewenstein critiques capitalism as a system that systematically exploits crises for private gain, often at the expense of public welfare and democratic oversight. In his 2015 book Disaster Capitalism: Making a Killing Out of Catastrophe, he documents how corporations capitalize on events like earthquakes, conflicts, and economic downturns to expand privatized services, drawing on field investigations in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake, Afghanistan amid ongoing war, and Papua New Guinea's resource disputes. He contends that this model, extending Naomi Klein's "shock doctrine" framework, involves firms securing no-bid contracts for reconstruction and security, leading to inefficient outcomes and entrenched inequality, as evidenced by the slow recovery in Haiti where foreign contractors received billions in aid while local infrastructure lagged. Loewenstein highlights specific companies, including G4S for prison management and Serco for asylum processing in Australia, arguing they prioritize shareholder returns over human rights, with global revenues from such operations exceeding $100 billion annually by the mid-2010s. Corporate power, in Loewenstein's analysis, supersedes state authority, enabling unchecked influence over policy and resource extraction. His 2010 book Profits of Doom focuses on "vulture capitalism" in the mining sector, detailing how Australian firms like Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton dominate operations in and the Pacific, repatriating profits while contributing minimally to host economies— for instance, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where mineral exports valued at $24 billion in 2008 yielded less than 2% in taxes due to opaque deals and tax havens. He attributes this to neoliberal since the , which has allowed multinationals to evade environmental regulations and labor standards, as seen in Bougainville's resistance to re-entry by Rio Tinto post-1989 , where locals cited from the that allegedly contaminated rivers and farmland. Loewenstein extends these arguments to the military-industrial complex, where private contractors profit from perpetual conflict. In interviews, he describes how firms like secured over $39 billion in contracts between 2003 and 2012, often through cost-plus arrangements that incentivized overruns, undermining accountability and fueling endless wars for economic benefit. He warns that this corporate dominance erodes , with of services like detention—Australia's offshore centers managed by private operators costing $4 billion yearly by 2015—resulting in documented abuses including inadequate medical care and indefinite holding, as reported in UN inquiries. While Loewenstein's accounts rely on on-the-ground reporting and leaked documents, critics note his emphasis on corporate malfeasance sometimes overlooks state complicity in enabling these dynamics through policy choices.

Advocacy on Refugees and Detention Policies

Loewenstein has been a vocal critic of Australia's offshore detention regime for asylum seekers, arguing that it constitutes a humanitarian violation driven by profit motives rather than needs. In a 2016 Guardian article, he advocated for sanctions against , citing the country's mandatory detention and island processing policies as deliberate abuses of , including the prolonged incarceration of refugees on and since 2013. He has highlighted empirical evidence of and deaths in these facilities, attributing them to indefinite detention conditions that exacerbate trauma, as documented in reports from medical professionals and UN observers. Central to Loewenstein's advocacy is the role of in detention systems, which he claims incentivizes cost-cutting over human welfare. In his 2015 book Disaster Capitalism: Making a Killing Out of Catastrophe, he examines how corporations like and Transfield Services (later Broadspectrum) profited from Australian contracts worth billions, with Transfield earning over A$1.5 billion from 2013 to 2016 despite documented failures in service delivery and oversight. A February 2016 New York Times by Loewenstein extended this critique internationally, noting that private firms manage facilities holding over 11,000 immigrants in the and similar setups in , where profit models correlate with reduced staffing and increased incidents of and . Loewenstein has warned against the global emulation of 's model, particularly by the , describing it as a blueprint for cruelty that externalizes to third countries while ignoring causal factors like regional instability driving migration. In a June 2018 piece, he detailed how 's policy—barring boat arrivals from resettlement since 2013—has influenced EU deals with and , leading to documented abuses including enslavement and drowning of thousands in the Mediterranean. He proposed alternatives such as regional processing hubs with and called for accountability measures, including in July 2017 advocating a sports boycott of to pressure policy reversal, drawing parallels to sanctions against apartheid-era . Additionally, Loewenstein has targeted ancillary actors, such as airlines facilitating deportations, urging in August 2018 that carriers refuse participation in removals violating conventions. His reporting extends to investigative visits, including asylum housing outsourced to and , where a November 2015 Verso analysis revealed squalid conditions and fire hazards affecting thousands of claimants, mirroring Australian privatization flaws. Loewenstein maintains that Australia's full outsourcing of asylum detention—the only nation to do so comprehensively—prioritizes lowest-cost bids over efficacy, as evidenced by contract renewals despite scandals like 's 2013 fraud charges for falsified attendance records. While his critiques emphasize detainee suffering, they often frame policy origins in deterrence against people-smuggling networks responsible for over 1,200 sea deaths between 2008 and 2013, though Loewenstein attributes ongoing issues to systemic profit incentives rather than smuggling risks.

Controversies and Criticisms

Accusations of Anti-Semitism and Anti-Zionism

Antony Loewenstein, an Australian Jewish journalist who identifies as , has faced repeated accusations from pro- groups and individuals within the Jewish community that his critiques of amount to anti-Semitism or employ anti-Semitic tropes. These claims often center on his opposition to as a political ideology, his support for the (BDS) movement against , and statements portraying Israeli policies as akin to apartheid or colonial oppression. Critics, including the Australia/ & Jewish Affairs Council (AIJAC), argue that such positions delegitimize Jewish and echo historical anti-Jewish narratives by singling out the for unique moral condemnation. The controversy intensified following the 2006 publication of Loewenstein's book My Israel Question, which questioned the influence of Zionist lobbying in and critiqued uncritical support for among diaspora Jews. In response, Loewenstein was accused of factual inaccuracies, such as claiming built "Jewish-only roads" in the —a characterization AIJAC disputed as misleading, noting that roads are restricted based on security concerns rather than ethnicity alone—and of promoting a narrative that conflates legitimate policy criticism with inherent Jewish culpability. Some detractors labeled him a "self-hating Jew," a term evoking classic anti-Semitic stereotypes of internalized Jewish self-loathing, and accused him of aligning with groups perceived as hostile to Jewish interests, including sympathizers. Letters and public responses to his work described him as a "soft anti-Semitic coward" and part of movements like BDS, which critics contend harbors anti-Semitic elements by denying 's right to exist as a . Loewenstein has consistently rejected these accusations, asserting that anti-Zionism targets a nationalist ideology rather than as a people, and that equating the two serves to shield from accountability for actions like settlement expansion and military operations in Gaza. In a 2007 interview, he emphasized his Jewish identity while arguing that diaspora should not be bound to unconditional support for Israeli policies, drawing parallels to historical Jewish critiques of state power. He has cited personal experiences of , including family and threats, as evidence of communal pressure tactics rather than genuine anti-Semitic intent on his part. Recent iterations of the debate, amid 's 2023–2024 Gaza operations, saw Loewenstein branded a "traitor" and "self-hating Jew" by some for documentaries and writings framing Israeli actions as genocidal or reliant on anti-Semitic far-right allies abroad. Pro-Israel sources like AIJAC maintain that Loewenstein's two-decade output recycles unsubstantiated claims, such as exaggerated influence or minimization of Palestinian rejectionism, thereby contributing to an environment where anti-Semitism thrives under the guise of . Loewenstein counters that such criticisms reflect a strategic to suppress , pointing to empirical on Israeli abuses and declining Jewish support for among younger demographics as validation for his positions. The debate underscores broader tensions in Jewish communities over whether vehement inherently risks anti-Semitic spillover, with Loewenstein's Jewish heritage invoked by both sides: detractors as proof of internalized betrayal, and defenders as evidence against prejudice.

Backlash Over Specific Statements and Publications

Loewenstein's 2006 book My Israel Question elicited significant criticism from segments of the Australian Jewish community and reviewers who argued it unfairly portrayed as the primary aggressor in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and inadequately addressed Jewish historical trauma. Philip Mendes, in a Sydney Morning Herald review, contended that the work prioritized Palestinian narratives while downplaying 's security concerns, describing it as a missed opportunity for balanced analysis. Similarly, Tamas Pataki's assessment in the Australian Book Review highlighted the book's timing amid Israeli military operations in , implying its arguments aligned with adversarial framing rather than nuanced historical context. The publication fueled broader debates, with detractors accusing it of perpetuating tropes about Jewish influence by scrutinizing support for , though Loewenstein maintained it aimed to disentangle from anti-Semitism. In the 2024 ABC documentary Not in My Name, Loewenstein's assertions that Jewish security requires Palestinian safety and his rejection of Israel's Gaza operations as unjust drew rebukes from Jewish organizations, who labeled him a "self-hating Jew" and traitor for allegedly undermining communal solidarity amid rising global anti-Semitism. The program, which explored his personal journey from Zionist upbringing to outspoken critic, prompted complaints to the ABC Ombudsman citing fostering of anti-Zionist sentiment that indirectly encouraged attacks on , though the investigation found no editorial breach. Critics within pro-Israel circles argued such public dissent amplified division, equating it to enabling external threats, while supporters viewed the backlash as stifling legitimate intra-Jewish discourse. A September 2025 statement on ABC Radio National, where Loewenstein remarked that Germany's culpability for extends "to some extent" in shaping its current pro-Israel policies, provoked conservative media outcry for appearing to minimize Nazi-era atrocities. commentators highlighted the remark as revisionist, suggesting it diluted collective German responsibility in favor of critiquing modern atonement measures like restrictions on pro-Palestinian protests. This occurred amid promotion of his Al Jazeera documentary Germany's Israel Obsession, which examined guilt's role in suppressing Gaza criticism, further intensifying accusations of historical insensitivity from outlets wary of narratives that contextualize Germany's stance as overcompensatory rather than purely moral.

Reception and Debates in Broader Communities

Loewenstein's critiques of Israeli policies have sparked debates within Jewish communities, where he is often portrayed as an outlier challenging communal consensus on . In , he has claimed exclusion from Jewish events and labeling as a self-hating Jew for supporting Palestinian rights and boycotts, positioning himself as defending liberal Jewish humanism against what he terms Israeli supremacy. Jewish communal representatives have countered that his narratives misrepresent internal diversity, asserting vibrant debate exists and accusing him of promoting falsehoods that alienate him voluntarily from the fold. These exchanges highlight tensions over whether equates to disloyalty, with pro-Israel voices arguing Loewenstein's advocacy bolsters anti-Semitic tropes by questioning Jewish . In conservative and pro-Israel commentary, Loewenstein's work faces accusations of selective outrage and historical revisionism. Outlets have criticized his attribution of partial German societal complicity in —framed by him as a lesser but contextual factor amid Nazi agency—as minimizing unique perpetrator responsibility, fueling broader skepticism of his analytical rigor on . Detractors, including those from Jewish advocacy groups, debate his books like The Palestine Laboratory (2023) as conflating legitimate security measures with systemic oppression, potentially aiding narratives that delegitimize amid empirical data on threats from groups like . Such critiques emphasize causal links between his positions and rising global anti-Semitism, citing spikes in incidents post-October 7, 2023, as evidence that intersects with prejudice, though Loewenstein rejects this as a smear to silence evidence-based opposition. Beyond insular circles, Loewenstein garners support from anti-occupation activists and some diaspora Jews who view him as amplifying suppressed voices on issues like policies and arms exports, debating his role in eroding uncritical allegiance to . However, in wider political discourse, including right-leaning analyses, his alignment with BDS and portrayals of as an "abyss" of militarism are contested as ignoring Palestinian agency in stalled peace processes and over-relying on anecdotal fieldwork over comprehensive data on conflict dynamics. These debates underscore divisions where empirical scrutiny of power imbalances clashes with concerns over ideological capture in media narratives, with Loewenstein's persistence cited by proponents as principled and by opponents as partisan advocacy.

Recent Developments

Activities Since 2023

In 2023, Loewenstein published The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports the Technology of Occupation Around the World, examining 's development and global sale of and technologies tested in Palestinian territories. The book received literary awards and shortlistings, including recognition from the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards in 2024. In 2024, he launched the series The Palestine Laboratory in collaboration with Drop Site News, investigating Israel's use of Palestinian areas as a testing ground for exported technologies since 1948, with episodes released starting October 10. The series expanded into a documentary format, with episodes such as "" and "How to Make Friends" addressing Israel's military-industrial complex. By 2025, Loewenstein produced and promoted a adaptation of The Palestine Laboratory, shortlisted for a Walkley Award on October 17. He conducted screenings and Q&A sessions, including events at Cinema Nova on September 18 and Dendy’s Newtown on July 26. Speaking engagements included a May 19 appearance at London's Frontline Club discussing Israeli since , 2023. He continued journalism, publishing articles like "Looking to Capitalise on Destruction in Gaza" on October 21 and contributing to outlets such as Al Jazeera on October 9 regarding Israeli accountability for Gaza operations. Appearances on platforms like Democracy Now! and addressed tech firms' roles in Gaza conflicts.

Ongoing Impact and Responses

Loewenstein's 2023 book The Palestine Laboratory: How Israel Exports the Technology of Occupation Around the World has sustained influence in examinations of Israel's military-industrial complex, with citations in academic journals and media analyses linking Palestinian territories' surveillance practices to global tech exports by firms like Palantir and . The work has informed discussions on Western complicity in Gaza operations through tech supply chains, including integrations by and Amazon, as highlighted in 2025 investigative reports. By mid-2025, the book saw translations and endorsements in outlets critiquing Israel's post-October 7, 2023, military expansions, framing as a testing ground for exported weaponry. In 2024 and 2025, Loewenstein extended this through a Drop Site News series, including episodes on Israel's "" model and aftermath, amassing listens and references in independent journalism circles. He contributed to Al Jazeera's September 2025 documentary on Germany's crackdowns on Gaza protests, drawing from his Jewish-German heritage to argue historical remembrance enables current pro-Israel policies suppressing dissent. Public talks, such as a July 2025 event, positioned as a "global threat" via arms proliferation, resonating in activist networks but amplifying debates on his portrayal of state power. Responses remain polarized: pro-Palestinian commentators, including in and , have lauded his exposure of media and corporate enabling of Gaza operations as evidence-based challenging Western narratives. Conversely, conservative Australian media in September 2025 criticized his Al Jazeera appearance for implying Germany's guilt partially justifies its Gaza stance, viewing it as inflammatory revisionism amid ongoing accusations of anti-Zionist bias in his oeuvre. His personal site archives reader correspondence reflecting hostility from pro-Israel audiences, underscoring persistent divides in reception. These dynamics illustrate how Loewenstein's output fuels advocacy against occupation tech while inviting rebuttals questioning its selective framing of Israeli actions versus regional threats.

References

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