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El. knyga: Zionism, Palestinian Nationalism and the Law: 1939-1948

(UCLA Center for Middle East Development, USA)

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"During the last decade of the British Mandate for Palestine (1939-1948), Arabs and Jews used the law as a resource to gain leverage against each other and to influence international opinion. The parties invoked "transformational legal framing" to portray the essentially political-religious conflict as a legal dispute involving claims of justice, injustice and victimization, and giving rise to legal/equitable remedies. Employing this form of narrative and framing in multiple "trials" during the first 15 years of the Mandate, the parties continued the practice during the last and most crucial decade of the Mandate. The term "trial" provides an appropriate typology for understanding the adversarial proceedings during those years in which judges, lawyers, witnesses, cross-examination and legal argumentation played a key role in the conflict. The four trials between 1939-1948 produced three different outcomes: the one-state solution in favour of the Palestinian Arabs, the no-state solution, and the two-statesolution embodied in the United Nations November 1947 partition resolution. This study analyses the role of the law during the last decade of the British Mandate for Palestine, making an essential contribution to the literature on lawfare, framing and narrative and the Arab-Israeli Conflict"--

During the last decade of the British Mandate for Palestine (1939-1948), Arabs and Jews used the law as a resource to gain leverage against each other and to influence international opinion.

List of figures
ix
List of tables
xii
List of maps
xiii
List of cases and statutes
xiv
Preface and explanatory note xiii
Acknowledgements xix
Introduction 1(14)
PART I Theoretical framework
15(26)
1 Framing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
17(24)
PART II The London Conferences -- Zionism on trial and the one-state solution
41(92)
2 Prelude to the London Conferences
43(10)
3 The London Conferences
53(46)
4 The White Paper
99(21)
5 Appeal to the Permanent Mandates Commission
120(8)
6 Assessment
128(5)
PART III The Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry -- British policy on trial and the no-state solution
133(156)
7 Enter America: Formation of the Anglo-American Committee
135(30)
8 Committee hearings
165(71)
9 Deliberations and verdict
236(32)
10 Britain undermines the verdict: The Morrison-Grady provincial autonomy plan
268(16)
11 Assessment
284(5)
PART IV UNSCOP and the UN Ad Hoc Committee -- Palestinian nationalism on trial and the two-state solution
289(116)
12 UNSCOP hearings and verdict
291(55)
13 Ad Hoc Committee hearings and verdict
346(20)
14 The United Nations and the two-state solution
366(35)
15 Assessment
401(4)
PART V Legal consequences
405(26)
16 Legal implications of the Palestinian Arab rejection of the United Nations 1947 offer of statehood
407(24)
Conclusion 431(5)
Bibliography 436(31)
Index 467
Steven E. Zipperstein, a former US federal prosecutor, is a Senior Fellow at the UCLA Center for Middle East Development and a Lecturer in the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs and the UCLA Global Studies program, and in the Department of History at UC Santa Barbara. Zipperstein is also a Visiting Proefssor of Law and Tel Aviv University, and is the author of Law and the Arab-Israeli Conflict: The Trials of Palestine (Routledge, 2020).