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As the British Mandate in Palestine ended in mid-May 1948, responsibility for the territory shifted to the newly-formed United Nations. With tensions between Zionist settler Jews and Indigenous Arab Palestinians at an apex, the international organization sought to engender peace by implementing an internationalization of the Holy City of Jerusalem and its environs. In this interview, Harris Ford discusses the United Nations’ vision of internationalization and the supranational sovereignty it imagined for itself over Jerusalem, as well as local Palestinian, Jordanian, and Israeli residents within the city. Notwithstanding the creation of a commission, local consultations, international conferences, and two draft statutes, the UN plan to internationalize the area encompassing the Holy City failed by the mid-1950s. As we delved into the plan Harris argues that the plan to internationalize Jerusalem failed because it only pleased the United Nations. His work has been published as a Master Thesis and it is available in the link below; Harris has also published an article in the Jerusalem Quarterly focusing on the past-future, in other words, what could have been, but didn't happen.
https://harvest.usask.ca/handle/10388/13562
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/jerusalemunplugged.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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As the British Mandate in Palestine ended in mid-May 1948, responsibility for the territory shifted to the newly-formed United Nations. With tensions between Zionist settler Jews and Indigenous Arab Palestinians at an apex, the international organization sought to engender peace by implementing an internationalization of the Holy City of Jerusalem and its environs. In this interview, Harris Ford discusses the United Nations’ vision of internationalization and the supranational sovereignty it imagined for itself over Jerusalem, as well as local Palestinian, Jordanian, and Israeli residents within the city. Notwithstanding the creation of a commission, local consultations, international conferences, and two draft statutes, the UN plan to internationalize the area encompassing the Holy City failed by the mid-1950s. As we delved into the plan Harris argues that the plan to internationalize Jerusalem failed because it only pleased the United Nations. His work has been published as a Master Thesis and it is available in the link below; Harris has also published an article in the Jerusalem Quarterly focusing on the past-future, in other words, what could have been, but didn't happen.
https://harvest.usask.ca/handle/10388/13562
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/jerusalemunplugged.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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