The law has been condemned as a violation of freedom of expression, "deeply undemocratic", widely criticised in the Israeli media, and "three dozen" eminent law professors have described it as unconstitutional. After the law was enacted, a number of Israeli civil rights groups declared that they would legally challenge the law by petitioning the
Supreme Court of Israel. The
Association for Civil Rights in Israel claimed that the law is "unconstitutional and anti-democratic" and sets a bad precedent.
Gush Shalom,
Adalah,
Physicians for Human Rights, the
Public Committee Against Torture in Israel and the
Coalition of Women for Peace – said that they would join legal challenges. On 12 July 2011, Gush Shalom was the first to lodge a petition against the law.
NGO Monitor has said that the law is not "the appropriate means to combat the
BDS movement." The Supreme Court of Israel upheld the law, but struck down provisions allowing compensation without proof of damages.
Application The first lawsuit filed under the law was in 2018 by
Shurat HaDin, an Israeli
civil rights group, claiming $13,000 in "emotional damages" on behalf of three Israeli teenagers who had bought tickets for a show that was cancelled after a call to boycott. It was the first time to have been successfully applied, due to the difficulty of proving a direct link between a call to boycott and any actual damage caused by it. In October 2018, the Jerusalem Magistrate's Court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and ordered that the two New Zealand activists pay NIS 45,000 ($12,300) in damages to the plaintiffs' "artistic welfare", and court fees. The activists claimed the case "has no legitimacy" and refused to pay. In 2021, the law was relied upon in a decision by the
Israeli Supreme Court which upheld a 2018 prohibition enacted by the Knesset Ethics Committee on Knesset Member
Yousef Jabareen; Jabareen was barred from traveling to the U.S. for a lecture tour on account of his intended tour being sponsored by
Jewish Voice for Peace, a pro-BDS organization. == See also ==