|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
One of the core aspects of the Palestinian refugee question is that
of compensation or reparations for Palestinian refugees forcibly
displaced by the establishment of Israel. The Nakba saw the
displacement of 85% of the Palestinian Arab population and the
descendants of these displaced peoples numbers almost 5 million.
Despite the gravity of the situation and the importance of
restorative justice, many of the complex technical issues
compensation would entail have not received adequate attention.
Applying their expertise and looking at past examples of claims
mechanisms, a rich variety of contributors - including Palestinian,
Israeli, and international scholars, analysts, and former officials
- examine the topic from an array of legal, economic, and political
perspectives. Answering questions such as: How would property
losses be recovered? What about displaced persons within Israel?
What would the Israeli response be to reparations? The contributors
cast new and important light on the way the issue has been
approached in past negotiations, the structure of possible
compensation regimes and potential challenges and obstacles to
implementation.
In this unique volume, leading analysts from the Red Cross, Middle
East Institute and Refugee Affairs - many of whom have been
actively involved in past negotiations on this issue - provide an
overview of the key dimensions of the Palestinian refugee problem.
Mindful of the sensitive and contested nature of the subject, none
offers a single solution. Instead, each contribution summarises and
synthesises the existing scholarly and governmental work on the
topic. Each paper develops an array of policy options for resolving
various aspects of the refugee issue. From moral acknowledgements
of the plight of refugees, to host countries, repatriation and
reparations, each policy analysis is written to provide a broad
menu of choices rather than a single narrow set of recommendations.
No other work on the Palestinian refugee issue has undertaken such
a task. The Palestinian Refugee Problem: The Search for a
Resolution is likely to be a pre-eminent reference and analytical
work on the topic for many years to come.
One of the core aspects of the Palestinian refugee question is that
of compensation or reparations for Palestinian refugees forcibly
displaced by the establishment of Israel. The Nakba saw the
displacement of 85% of the Palestinian Arab population and the
descendants of these displaced peoples numbers almost 5 million.
Despite the gravity of the situation and the importance of
restorative justice, many of the complex technical issues
compensation would entail have not received adequate attention.
Applying their expertise and looking at past examples of claims
mechanisms, a rich variety of contributors - including Palestinian,
Israeli, and international scholars, analysts, and former officials
- examine the topic from an array of legal, economic, and political
perspectives. Answering questions such as: How would property
losses be recovered? What about displaced persons within Israel?
What would the Israeli response be to reparations? The contributors
cast new and important light on the way the issue has been
approached in past negotiations, the structure of possible
compensation regimes and potential challenges and obstacles to
implementation.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|