This book is a comprehensive empirical analysis of UN intervention in the Arab-Israeli conflict since 1947. In his structured and exhaustive analysis, the author presents a long term perspective on the UN intervention in the conflict and explains its evolution during the last sixty years. Offering a twofold contribution, both in general to the literature on third party intervention in conflict and to the specific studies on United Nations interventions in conflict resolution, the analysis answers such questions as: Why did the United Nations have different involvement and efforts of interventions in the conflict both in quantitative and qualitative terms? How did the UN role change during the dispute, and why did it change? Is there still a role for the UN in the Palestinian-Israeli peace process? The UN and the Arab-Israeli Conflict will be of great interest to International Relation scholars and students, but also appreciable by historians, political scientists, methodologists and all the social scientists interested in the Palestine question and the United Nations.