Stanford University Press is
publishing a new book on the history of investigative commissions in Palestine.
ABOUT THE BOOK
This book offers a provocative
retelling of Palestinian political history through an examination of the
international commissions that have investigated political violence and human
rights violations. More than twenty commissions have been convened over the
last century, yet no significant change has resulted from these inquiries. The
findings of the very first, the 1919 King-Crane Commission, were suppressed.
The Mitchell Committee, convened in the heat of the Second Intifada, urged
Palestinians to listen more sympathetically to the feelings of their occupiers.
And factfinders returning from a shell-shocked Gaza Strip in 2008 registered
their horror at the scale of the destruction, but Gazans have continued to live
under a crippling blockade.
Drawing on debates in the press,
previously unexamined UN reports, historical archives, and ethnographic
research, Lori Allen explores six key investigative commissions over the last
century. She highlights how Palestinians' persistent demands for independence have
been routinely translated into the numb language of reports and resolutions.
These commissions, Allen argues, operating as technologies of liberal global
governance, yield no justice—only the oppressive status quo. A History
of False Hope issues a biting critique of the captivating allure and
cold impotence of international law.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Lori Allen is Reader
in Anthropology at SOAS University of London. She is the author of The
Rise and Fall of Human Rights: Cynicism and Politics in Occupied Palestine (Stanford,
2013).
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: International Law
as a Way of Being
1 Petitioning
Liberals: The King-Crane Commission
2 Universalizing
Liberal Internationalism: The Arab Revolt and the Boycott of the Peel
Commission
3 The Humanitarian
Politics of Jewish Suffering: The Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry
4 Third World
Solidarity at the General Assembly: A UN Special Committee on Human Rights
5 The Silences of
Democratic Listening: The Mitchell Committee
6 The Shift to Crime
and Punishment: UN Missions Renewing Hope in International Law
Conclusion: Toward an
Anthropology of International Law, and Next Time and Again for Palestine
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