Law and the Arab–Israeli Conflict: The Trials of Palestine (UCLA Center for Middle East Development

Posted By: arundhati

Steven E. Zipperstein, "Law and the Arab–Israeli Conflict: The Trials of Palestine (UCLA Center for Middle East Development "
English | ISBN: 036743508X | 2020 | 412 pages | EPUB | 14 MB

During the British Mandate for Palestine (1922–1948), Arabs and Jews repeatedly used the law to gain leverage and influence international opinion, especially in three dramatic and largely forgotten trials involving two issues: the interplay between conflicting British promises to the Arabs and Jews during World War I, and the parties’ rights and claims to the Wailing Wall.
Focusing on how all three parties – Arab, Jewish, and British – used the law and the legal process to advance their objectives during the Mandate years, this volume reveals how the parties availed themselves – with varying degrees of success – of the law and the legal process. The book examines various legal arguments they proffered, and how that early tendency to resort to the law as a tool, a resource, and a weapon in the conflict has continued to this day. The research relies almost entirely on primary source documents, including transcripts of the public and secret testimony before the Shaw, Lofgren, and Peel Commissions, diaries, letters, government files, and other original sources.