Abstract

The political and economic pressures on European Jews created mass migration to Palestine during the first half of the 1930s, which exacerbated the conflict of Arab and Jewish nationalism. While searching to find a balance between the two opposing sets of demands — for and against immigration; for and against a free market in land sales; for and against continuation of the Mandate — the British Government was caught up in rapidly-changing international circumstances, which threatened the dominance Britain had established in the Middle East after the First World War.

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