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
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).
"This brilliant study not only succeeds in recovering the lives,
aspirations and agency of Palestinians written out of history, but
helps correct the balance of long-term bias against them. All those
who have wondered why successive investigative commissions in
Palestine have created only impotent solidarity should read this
book."—Raja Shehadeh, author of Going Home: A Walk Through Fifty
Years of Occupation
"Lori Allen provides a remarkable account of how investigative
commissions shaped the form, content, and tenor of conversations
about Palestine and between Palestinians and western powers. A
History of False Hope is indispensable for understanding the nature
of the failure of international law in Palestine."—Ilana Feldman,
George Washington University
"Lori Allen has produced a fascinating, engaging, and innovative
scholarly assessment of how international commissions have failed
to deliver political results to the Palestinian people. This
disillusioning narrative of good intentions gone awry sheds light
on the interplay of law and politics in international relations,
and is further enriched by illuminating archival research and the
arresting insights of a first-class anthropologist."—Richard Falk,
Former UN Special Rapporteur for Palestine, author of Palestine's
Horizon: Toward a Just Peace
"Allen's book juxtaposes Palestinian investment in their political
rights against the international community's determination to
thwart a solution. A book that takes a subaltern view of history,
the book presents the illusion of "hope" in an accessible and
chronological manner, pinning culpability on the international
culprits that exploited Palestine for the spoils of
settler-colonialism."—Ramona Wadi, The New Arab
"A History of False Hope constitutes a significant contribution to
the scholarly understanding of the workings of international law
and of investigative bodies, along with a fresh perspective on how
and why they have failed the Palestinians."—Zachary Lockman,
H-Diplo
"If history serves as a signpost for the future, Allen's book
expertly shows the limitations of engaging with international
commissions and international law as a mechanism for Palestinians
to attain their long-denied rights."—Josh Ruebner, The Electronic
Intifada
"Focusing on half a dozen of the most important missions with a
sharp anthropologist's eye, Lori Allen highlights the reaction of
Palestinian opinion to the ostensible opportunities offered by the
commissions, and the hopes they raised and dashed."—Jim Muir,
London School of Economics Review of Books
"The project of [A History of False Hope] is to explain why
Palestinians have generally provided consent to processes that have
contributed to their subjugation and undermined their national
desires at every turn. Allen does this successfully through careful
explication of how the liberal paradigm came to dominate
Palestinian politics."—Abraham Silberstein, Israel Studies Review
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