What explains the peculiar intensity and evident intractability of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? Of all the ”hot spots” in the world today, the apparently endless clash between Jews and Arabs in the Middle East seems unique in its longevity and resistance to resolution. Is this conflict really different from other ethnic and nationalist confrontations, and if so, in what way?
In this fully revised and expanded fifth edition of his highly respected introductory text, Alan Dowty demystifies the conflict by putting it in broad historical perspective, identifying its roots, and tracing its evolution up to the current impasse. His account offers a clear analytic framework for understanding transformations over time, and in doing so, punctures the myths of an ”age-old” conflict with an unbridgeable gap between the two sides. Rather than simply reciting historical detail, this book presents a clear overview that serves as a road map through the thicket of conflicting claims. Updated to include recent developments, such as the recent Israeli elections and the debate over the two-state solution, the new edition presents in full the opposed perspectives of the two sides, leaving readers to make their own evaluations of the issues. The book thus expresses fairly and objectively the concerns, hopes, fears, and passions of both sides, making it clear why this conflict is waged with such vehemence – and how, for all that, the gap between the two sides has narrowed over time.
विषयसूची
Preface
Maps, Figures, and Tables
1. Introduction: Two Worlds Collide
2. The Jewish Story to 1914
3. The Arab Story to 1914
4. The Emergence of Israel, 1914-1967
5. The Re-Emergence of the Palestinians, 1967-1988
6. The First Pass at Peace, 1988-2001
7. The Fourth Stage of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, 2001-2009
8. The Downward Spiral since 2009
9. The Impasse That Remains
10. The Perfect Conflict
Chronology
Further Reading
Internet Links
References
Index
लेखक के बारे में
Alan Dowty is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame and Affiliate Professor at the University of Washington.