1st Edition

The State of Palestine A critical analysis

By Philip Leech Copyright 2017
    218 Pages
    by Routledge

    218 Pages
    by Routledge

    The Palestinian national movement reached a dead end and came close to disintegration at the beginning of the present century. This critical analysis of internal Palestinian politics in the West Bank traces the re-emergence of the Palestinian Authority's established elite in the aftermath of the failed unity government and examines the main security and economic agendas pursued by them during that period.



    Based on extensive field research interviews and participant observation undertaken across several sites in Nablus and the surrounding area, it provides a bottom-up interpretation of the Palestinian Authority's agenda and challenges the popular interpretation that its governance represents the only realistic path to Palestinian independence. As the first major account of the Palestinian Authority's political agenda since the collapse of the unity government this book offers a unique explanation for the failure to bring a Palestinian state into being and challenges assumptions within the existing literature by addressing the apparent incoherence between mainstream debates on Palestine and the reality of conditions there.



    This book is a key addition to students and scholars interested in Politics, Middle-Eastern Studies, and International Relations.



    1. Introduction




    2. The ‘State’ and Palestine






    3. The Fragmentation of Palestine






    4. Making Plans






    5. Palestinian Authoritarianism






    6. The ‘State of Palestine’






    7. ‘Economic Peace’






    8. Disaster, Capitalism and Palestine






    9. Conclusions


    Biography

    Philip Leech is Senior Fellow at the Institute for Government at the University of Ottawa, Canada, and a Visiting Fellow at the Kenyon Institute in Jerusalem. He has a PhD from Exeter University’s Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies and is the co-editor of Political Identities and Popular Uprisings in the Middle East (2016).

    The State of Palestine’ provides a comprehensive critique of the false messiah of state-building as a strategy for Palestinian emancipation. Based on extensive research in the occupied Palestinian territory, particularly in the city of Nablus, Leech critically assesses 20 years of the Palestinian Authority, but with a focus on the post-2006 era. This book is essential reading for those who wish to understand Palestinian politics today and for why the so-called ‘two-state solution’ was - and remains - so fundamentally flawed.

    - Dr Mandy Turner, Director of the Kenyon Institute in Jerusalem (Council for British Research in the Levant)

    The first thorough and scholarly examination of the post-Oslo reality in the West Bank. This careful and forensic study exposes the fallacies surrounding the reality on the ground in the areas under the Palestinian Authority control. A highly important source of information and deconstruction for anyone who wishes genuinely to understand, and change, the dismal reality on the ground in the West Bank and beyond.

    - Ilan Pappe, Professor of History at the Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies, Exeter University

    Drawing upon original fieldwork in the north of the West Bank, Phil Leech provides a meticulous and much-needed critique of the Palestinian Authority’s ‘state building’ project. This is a fascinating and timely account of Palestinian politics that deserves to be widely read.

    - Adam Hanieh, Senior Lecturer in Development Studies, the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.

    Leech makes a compelling case that the Palestinian Authority's and the international community's statebuilding project in the Occupied Territories never stood a real chance. Extensive engagement with the lived experience of those in cities, villages and refugee camps is married to a grasp of the higher politics and economi