'it is not unreasonable to suggest that the genocide in Gaza poses a series of conceptual, analytical and normative challenges for resistance scholars, and we are bound to ask searching questions about whether our concepts, theories, principles and normative positions remain relevant and useful in this moment of radical challenge. This historical moment presents, as an editorial in this journal suggested earlier, the opportunity to take up ‘new and more radical theoretical frameworks’ to better understand and confront the radical situation posed by the genocide in Gaza (Johansen and Vinthagen, 2020).'