The Two-State Solution: The UN Partition Resolution of Mandatory Palestine – Analysis and Sources
Author(s): . (Author)
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication Date: 15 Aug. 2013
Edition: Illustrated
Language: English
Print length: 304 pages
ISBN-10: 1623567815
ISBN-13: 9781623567811
Book Description
This timely work, contributed by noted authorities, explains the crucial events in the history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that led to the UN resolution to partition Palestine into two states on November 29, 1947.
The book first analyzes the historical context of UN resolution 181, including the positions and internal debates of the Jewish and Arab parties and of the international community. It then introduces primary sources related to the resolution, such as protocols, letters, reports, and speeches, some of these published for the first time in English. By combining in-depth analyses with such sources, the book provides a rich and comprehensive overview of the subject from a variety of perspectives. It shows that the arguments for a two-state solution, i.e., a Jewish state along a Palestinian state, are as relevant today as they were then. Featuring both Israeli and Palestinian points of view, this significant work renews the debate that has shaped –and is still shaping– the Arab-Israeli conflict. It will be an essential resource for anyone interested in the past and future of Israel and Palestine.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Ruth Gavison and her colleagues have directed attention to the historical, political and fundamental moral issues of the origins of United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181 of 29 November 1947, generally referred to as the UN Partition Resolution. Whether or not there is in fact a decline in the level of Israeli (and Palestinian) intellectual and moral acuity in addressing such existential concerns as were faced in the lead-up to1947, the overall result achieved in this instance is an eminently readable volume which is as stimulating, perplexing and challenging for an open-minded reader as the conflict itself.” —Robert Bowker, Australian Journal of Politics and History
About the Author
Ruth Gavison is Haim H. Cohn Professor Emerita of Human Rights at the Faculty of Law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel and the Founding President of Metzilah, a center for Zionist, Jewish, Humanist, and Liberal Tought. She has written extensively on human rights, Israeli society, and Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. She served as a member of the Winograd Commission, which investigated the 2nd Lebanon War (Sept. 2006- Jan. 2008).