The peace movement in Israel, 1967-87
著者
書誌事項
The peace movement in Israel, 1967-87
(St. Antony's/Macmillan series)
Macmillan in association with St Antony's Colege, Oxford, 1990
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注記
Bibliography: p. 209-213. - Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
20 years after the Six-Day War, Israeli society remains deeply divided over the future of the occupied territories. This book depicts the struggle of ordinary Israelis to end the occupation and to stem the tides of racism and religious-nationalism so apparent since Israel's victory in 1967. The text describes the sudden growth of the peace movement following President Sadat's visit to Jerusalem in 1977 and the intense activity during the war in Lebanon. The ideological, ethnic and religious differences within the peace movement are analyzed, as are the different approaches used by a variety of groups striving for Arab-Israeli peace. The book concludes with an examination of Israeli dialogue with the Palestinian Liberation Organization, before and after a law was passed prohibiting such contacts.
目次
- Upsetting the balance
- the peace movement emerges
- the rise and fall of peace now
- against racism and for dialogue
- enemies talk - the story of Israeli-PLO dialogue
- ethnicity and the peace movement
- Mizrachi doves
- new Mizrachi initiatives and dialogue
- peace through encounters and education - Intervention Programmes in Jewish-Arab Contact (IPJACs)
- dovish parties and protest organizations - Mapam and Ratz
- protest movement organizations - Oz ve Shalom, the Birzeit Solidarity Committee, Parents Against Silence, Yesh Gvul - the limits of obedience
- non-violence, free speech and nuclear war - Mubarak Awad and the Palestinian non-violent struggle, Mordechai Vanunu and the threat of nuclear war, Gideon Spiro and free speech.
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