|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This edited volume explores Canada's foreign policy relationship
with the Palestinians and broader Middle East Peace Process (MEPP).
Canada was intensively involved from 1992 to 2000 in peacebuilding
as a mediator in the multilateral part of the MEPP, as chair of the
Refugee Working Group, and sponsor of Track II negotiations. This
all changed after a significant mid-2000s discursive and policy
shift when Canada withdrew from the politics of Israel-Palestine
peacebuilding and took a strong partisan stance in favour of
Israel. Through 10 chapters by current and former government
insiders and academics with extensive field experience, this unique
edited volume offers insight into decades of evolution in Canadian
policy toward the Palestinians, MEPP and the Middle East. It
arrives at an important time when the international community is
reconsidering how it views Israel's entrenched occupation of the
Palestinians, after three failed decades of United States-led
efforts to find peace through a negotiated two-state model. Today,
peace may never have appeared further away after the Trump
Administration adopted policies directly contradictory to the MEPP.
This proved a test to Canada's own official policy toward Israel
and Palestine, its longest running and most important region of
engagement in the Middle East. The chapters were originally
published as a special issue of the Canadian Foreign Policy
Journal, guest edited by Jeremy Wildeman and Emma Swan.
Palestine solidarity activism is on the rise and under siege. Led
by a coalition of students, labour unions, church groups, and
Palestinian and Jewish community organizations, the movement
advocating for Palestinian rights is forced to contend with
relentless condemnation, legal sanctions, sidelining, and
coordinated smear campaigns. Why is it so difficult to advocate for
Palestine in Canada? This courageous book grapples with this
question through a wide-ranging exploration of Palestine solidarity
activism, linking the movement's connections with global struggles
against racism, imperialism, and colonialism. Through this
indispensable contribution to our understanding of the complex
social and historical forces at work, Advocating for Palestine
touches on our era's most urgent debates, linking histories and
practices of settler colonialism and the meaning of solidarity
today to the media's role in shaping public opinion and the
relationship between Canadian foreign and domestic policy with the
movement's strategy of boycotts and lessons from the South African
anti-apartheid movement.
|
|