Abstract
This paper revisits the question of water conflict between Israel and Palestine in light of a political shift towards a one-state reality, with a focus on Palestinian water rights. It reassess the utility of various legal approaches to resolving water resource conflict equitably, and meaningfully articulating water rights, in the context of some form of Israeli annexation of the West Bank. In doing so, it seeks to move scholarship on water conflict between Israel and Palestine forward from predominant assumptions of a two-state solution and re-focus discussion on how international law can be most effectively used should some form of annexation occur.
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