Self-Determination, Statehood, and the Law of Negotiation: The Case of Palestine
Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Table of Contents -- Table of Case Law and Arbitral Awards -- Table of Legislation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Evolution of Palestinian Arab Proto-Self-Determination and "Peoplehood" During the Mandate for Palestine -- I. Introduction -- II. The Mandate System -- III. The Mandate for Palestine -- IV. The Concept of a Palestinian Arab "People" During the Mandate for Palestine -- V. The United Nations Special Committee on Palestine and the Drums of 1948 -- VI. Conclusion -- 3. From Disparate Means of Dispute Settlement to the Introduction of a Negotiation Imperative: 1948-1973 -- I. Introduction -- II. The Onset of War in Palestine and the United Nations Security Council's Questionnaire of May 18, 1948 -- III. The Role of the United Nations Mediator on Palestine -- IV. The Establishment of the United Nations Conciliation Commission for Palestine -- V. Arab Rejectionism and Boycotts of the Jewish State -- VI. Between 1967 and 1973: The Introduction of a Negotiation Imperative -- VII. Conclusion -- 4. The Emergence of Palestinian International Legal Personality and the Bilateral Negotiation Imperative: 1973 to Oslo -- I. Introduction -- II. In the Aftermath of United Nations Security Council Resolution 338 (1973): From Algiers to Rabat, and Geneva to Camp David -- III. The Second Phase: From Exclusion to the Beginnings of Begrudging Inclusion -- IV. To Oslo -- V. Conclusion -- 5. The International Law of Negotiation as a Means of Dispute Settlement -- I. Introduction -- II. The Relationship Between Negotiation and Other Means of Dispute Settlement -- III. The International Law of Negotiation -- IV. When Negotiation Breaks Down: Countermeasures and Other Responses -- V. Conclusion -- 6. The International Law of Negotiation and Palestinian Applications for Admission to the United Nations: Sword or Shield?.