Palestine, Palestinians and International Law provides a comprehensive survey of the international legal principles related to the Palestinian struggle for self-determination - from the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine awarded to Britain after WWI, through the partition of the Palestine Mandate by the United Nations after WWII, the Palestinian Declaration of an Independent State in 1988, the diplomatic recognition of the Palestinian state by nearly 130 other states, to the United Nations granting the State of Palestine all rights of a UN member state but the right to vote.
Palestine and International Law: The Legal Aspects of the Arab-Israeli Conflict
By the end of this book, the reader should be in an excellent position to go out and work for peace with justice for all peoples and states in the Middle East.”-Professor Francis A. Boyle, legal adviser to the Palestinian delegation to ...
The findings of this book will not only be of interest to students and scholars of Middle Eastern politics, International Law, International Relations and conflict resolution, but will be an invaluable resource for human rights researchers, ...
Kluwer Law International will be publishing the "Yearbook" from the eighth volume onwards and will also manage the distribution of the previous seven volumes.
... ( 1990/1991 ) 250 . Kassim , A. , 'The Palestinian: From hyphenated to integrated citizens' , Palestinian Yearbook of International Law 3 ( 1996 ) 64–84 . Kassim , A. , 'The Gulf Cooperation Council: Economic policies in the shadow of ...
The question of Palestine has been a pivotal one for international law ever since the foundation of the UN in 1945. It remains so today. On July 9, 2004, the...
All this will fail for the reasons so powerfully and eloquently stated in this book.
Kluwer Law International will be publishing the "Yearbook" from the eighth volume onwards and will also manage the distribution of the previous seven volumes.
This work provides a legal basis for future settlement of the status of Palestinians of all categories that emerged in some sixty years following the end of the Palestine Mandate: Israeli citizens, inhabitants of the occupied territory, and ...
James McDonald, My Mission in Israel, 1948–1951 (New York: Simon & Schuster 1951), at 116–117. The Special Representative of the United States in Israel (McDonald) to the Acting Secretary of State, 31 December 1948, Foreign Relations of ...