Lexington Books
Pages: 186
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-4456-5 • Hardback • March 2011 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
Daanish Faruqi is a contributing editor to Logos: A Journal of Modern Society and Culture.
1 Note on Citations
2 Acknowledgments
3 Introduction
Part 4 Part I. The Changing Dynamics of Israeli Political Culture
Chapter 5 1. Who Are the Palestinians?
Chapter 6 2. Deconstructing Israeli Democracy: On the Cultural Prerequisites of Political Modernity
Chapter 7 3. Security-Settlement Complex
Part 8 Part II. 2000 to 2006: Sharon, the Intifada, and the Roadmap
Chapter 9 4. Ariel Sharon's War against the Palestinians
Chapter 10 5. The Building of a Wall
Chapter 11 6. West Bank Settlements Obstruct Peace: Israel's Empire State Building
Chapter 12 7. A Place for our Dream?
Part 13 Part III. 2006 to 2008: Hamas Election Sweep, Gaza Incursions, and the Annapolis Peace Conference
Chapter 14 8. Trials in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Chapter 15 9. Blitzkrieg in Gaza
Chapter 16 10. Who Are the Palestinians Today?
Part 17 Part IV. Gaza in 2009-10: Operation Cast Lead and the Future of the Peace Process
Chapter 18 11. Unjust and Illegal: The Israeli Attack on Gaza
Chapter 19 12. Gaza's Diminishing Landscape
20 Bibliography
Over the past two decades, more and more Americans have learned the truth about Israel's brutal policies toward the Palestinians. This terrific collection of essays-which explains why recent attempts to settle the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have failed-is another major step in setting the record straight. Anyone who wants to know why the Middle East peace process never leads to peace should read From Camp David to Cast Lead.
— John J. Mearsheimer, R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago
Choose any ten years in the history of Washington's Middle East 'peace process,' and you will find way more 'process' than anything resembling peace. Framing the most recent decade by two of its biggest disasters, Faruqi brings together a wide-ranging team of analysts to sort out why the failures continue-most importantly because of the longstanding U.S.-Israeli rejection of international law and human rights as the crucial basis for any serious solution. The assembly of Palestinian and other writers demonstrate how the 'two-state' model is, or soon will be, a hopeless anachronism-and crucially, the urgent need to consider new, not-so-new, different and creative alternatives for a just peace.
— Phyllis Bennis, Institute for Policy Studies and author of Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
The book is an essential read for anyone interested in the last decade of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Even the general readers cannot afford to miss this book which contains a wealth of opinions, analyses and proposed solutions. The book lives up to its goal as stated by the Editor Daanish Faruqi '...the goal of this volume is to challenge the underlying assumptions of prevailing peace paradigms by exposing their limitations in the aftermath of the past ten years'. The editor of the book must be congratulated for compiling this important addition to the Israel-Palestine conflict.
— Muslim World Book Review