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Negotiations between Israel and the Arab states have continued in one form or another for over a decade, through three Israeli administrations, the death of a King of Jordan, and through countless riots and incidences of protest by Palestinians and Jews alike. The agreements that have been reached, and some situations established by defacto rule and force majure, have created possibly irreversible economic and political structures. This collection presents a debate among eminent scholars and public officials over the power these structures engender in the region.

Produktbeschreibung
Negotiations between Israel and the Arab states have continued in one form or another for over a decade, through three Israeli administrations, the death of a King of Jordan, and through countless riots and incidences of protest by Palestinians and Jews alike. The agreements that have been reached, and some situations established by defacto rule and force majure, have created possibly irreversible economic and political structures. This collection presents a debate among eminent scholars and public officials over the power these structures engender in the region.
Autorenporträt
SHIMSON BICHLER Professor of Political Science, Hebrew University, Mount Scopus, Jerusalem NORA ANN COLTON Assistant Professor of International Economics, Drew University, Madison, New Jersey ISHAQ DIWAN PAUL J. FINDLEY Author and Lecturer BRADLEY L. GLASSER Lecturer, Columbia University, Middle East Centre FADLE NAQIB Professor of Economics, University of Waterloo, Canada ALWYN R. ROUYER Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Idaho SARA ROY Research Scholar, Centre for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University DENIS J. SULLIVAN Lecturer in Middle Eastern Studies, Northeastern University, Boston MICHAEL WALTON Macroeconomics Specialist GEORGE WILSON Distinguished Emeritus Professor of Business Economics and Public Policy, Indiana University, Bloomington STEPHEN ZUNES Associate Professor of Political Science, University of San Francisco