Abstract

As hostility to Israel has intensified in the Western world in recent times (especially within the Trade Union movement, academia, intellectual circles, and the political elite) there has been a noticeable increase in the call for a bi-national solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict as a viable alternative to a two-state solution. The Palestinian commentator Ahmad Samih Khalidi explained in a 1998 article in Prospect magazine that bi-nationalism entails an agreed equal sharing of the whole land [of Palestine] between two peoples . . . on the basis of equality between its citizens rather than ethnicity or national/religious origin.

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