Beschreibung:
This book analyses the impacts and responses to twenty-five years of "peace" between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization. It focuses on understanding the various political economies that have emerged and how different communities have developed distinct coping strategies as well as new forms of political expression and mobilization.
From the River to the Sea: Palestine and Israel in the Shadow of ‘Peace’ provides original analyses of how different coping strategies were developed as well as new forms of political expression, interaction, and mobilization since the 1993 peace deal between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel. Its premise is that an historical realism is essential in order to develop a route out of the post-Oslo impasse that extended and solidified the power imbalance under the auspices of ‘peace’. The book includes chapters from experts across the disciplines of anthropology, economics, law, political science and sociology to map out and critically assess the impacts and responses to this ‘peace’ in different geographical and political settings. These innovative analyses also investigate processes that might enable a future to be built based on greater equality and an end to the oppression and violence that currently exists between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea (and beyond).
Introduction: From The River to the Sea: Charting the Changes in Palestine and Israel Since 1993
Mandy Turner
Chapter 1. The Oslo Agreements – What Happened?
Diana Buttu
Chapter 2. The Localization of the Palestinian National Political Field
Jamil Hilal
Chapter 3. Lost in Transition: The Palestinian National Movement After Oslo
Tariq Dana
Chapter 4. The Structural Transformation of the Palestinian Economy after Oslo
Raja Khalidi
(With Tables 1, 2, and 3)
Chapter 5. The Politics of Exclusion of Palestinians in Israel Since Oslo: Between the Local and the National
Mansour Nasasra
Chapter 6: A New Nationalistic Political Grammar: Jewish-Israeli Society 25 Years After Oslo
Yonatan Mendel
Chapter 7. From Singapore to the Stone Age: The Gaza Strip and the Political Economy of Crisis
Toufic Haddad
Chapter 8. Occupied East Jerusalem Since the Oslo Accord: Isolation and Evisceration
Mansour Nasasra
Chapter 9. The Politics of Being “Ordinary”: Palestinian Refugees in Jordan After the Oslo Agreement
Luigi Achilli
Chapter 10. No “Plan B” Because “Plan A” Cannot fail: The Oslo Framework and Western Donors in the OPT, 1993-2017
Mandy Turner
(with Graphs 1, 2, 3, and 4)
Chapter 11. The Single State Solution: Vision, Obstacles and Dilemmas of a Re-Emergent Alternative in Flux
Cherine Hussein