Academic literature on the topic 'TERRITORIES OCCUPIED BY ISRAEL'

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Journal articles on the topic "TERRITORIES OCCUPIED BY ISRAEL"

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Maria, Immacolata Macioti. "Israel and the Occupied Territories." Academicus International Scientific Journal 1 (January 2010): 22–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.7336/academicus.2010.01.02.

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Belcher, Oliver Christian. "Introduction: The Occupied Palestinian Territories and Late-modern wars." Human Geography 4, no. 1 (March 2011): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/194277861100400101.

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The essays collected in this special issue address the intersections between the late-colonial occupation of the Palestinian Territories by the state of Israel, and the conduct of late-modern warfare. Taking the summer 2010 attack on the Gaza Aid flotilla, the devastating late-2009 assault on Gaza, and the everyday occupation and appropriation of the West Bank that continues to stranglehold the Palestinians as cues, each essay critically evaluates the material conditions that facilitate Israel's colonial project. As these essays attest, urbicide and infrastructural violence—institutionalized by the Israeli military most succinctly in the so-called “Dahiya Doctrine”— play a critical role in Israeli military practice. As the authors, each in their own way, argue, it is only by taking on these infrastructural material conditions which facilitate the Israeli occupation that one can begin to hold an honest conversation on the prospects for a peaceful solution, and an end to the colonial occupation and manufactured humanitarian crisis which plagues the Palestinians.
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Mady, Abdel-Fattah. "American foreign policy and peace in the Middle East." Contemporary Arab Affairs 3, no. 3 (July 1, 2010): 271–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17550912.2010.493739.

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The purpose of this study is to answer the following question: ‘Does US foreign policy undermine peace efforts in the Occupied Palestinian Territories?’ Careful observations of US foreign policy during the Oslo Process reveal that the United States has indeed undermined peace efforts in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. The American position substantially departed from United Nations Resolutions 242 and 338, which the Palestinians were promised would serve as the basis for negotiations. Although the American–Israeli alliance underwent periodic adjustments, American foreign policy has, over the last decade, helped to create a framework in the Middle East wherein only Israeli needs have legitimacy. During the Oslo Process, the United States and Israel have tried to impose Israel's plans on the Palestinians, ignoring United Nations resolutions and the international community. The evidence reveals that US foreign policy was based on double standards and unfair terms. Further, the seeming link between the aid provided by the United States to Israel and the latter's aggressive policies toward the Palestinians makes it appear as though Washington is ‘rewarding’ such policies, that is, as if Washington is enabling Israel to deny Palestinians’ legitimate rights, violate United Nations resolutions and principles of international law, keep its military occupation forces, and expand Jewish settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
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Ben-Naftali, Orna, and Yuval Shany. "Living in Denial: The Application of Human Rights in the Occupied Territories." Israel Law Review 37, no. 1 (2003): 17–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021223700012413.

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AbstractAre human rights norms applicable to occupied territories in general, and to the West Bank and the Gaza Strip in particular? The article examines the controversy that had arisen between Israel and the UN treaty monitoring bodies in relation to this question and critically analyzes Israel's three objections to such applicability: 1) the mutual exclusivity of humanitarian regime and human rights regime in occupied territories, the former being thus the only applicable law; 2) a restrictive interpretation of the jurisdictional provisions treaties; and 3) the lack of effective control in some of the territories. The article posits that the universal object and purpose of human rights treaties, which inform the proper interpretation of their jurisdictional clauses, require their applicability in all territories subject to the effective control of the state parties, as well as to other extra-territorial exercises of government power directly affecting individuals. Consequently, international human rights law and international humanitarian law apply in occupied territories in parallel and not to the exclusion of one another. This position is confirmed by extensive practice of the international human rights monitoring bodies, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), and by some decisions of the Israeli Supreme Court. In conclusion, the paper posits that Israel's refusal to apply the six principal human rights treaties to which it is party to the Occupied Territories is incompatible with its international law obligations and proceeds to propose modalities for the co-application of both human rights and humanitarian law in occupied territories.
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Najah Duqmaq. "Israel's International Legal Responsibility for Human Rights Violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory In accordance with the provisions of international law." مجلة جامعة فلسطين الأهلية للبحوث والدراسات 1, no. 1 (December 30, 2022): 4–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.59994/pau.2022.1.4.

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The West Bank, Gaza Strip, and the city of Jerusalem are occupied territories occupied by Israel following hostilities in the 1967 war. Israel was a State party to the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, which refused to apply it to the occupied territories since the common article I of the four Geneva Conventions showed respect for and universal adherence to the principles contained therein. However, Israel has not complied with this but has committed serious violations of the rights of Palestinian citizens, criminalized under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. The research aims to hold Israel internationally responsible for its illegal actions in the occupied Palestinian territories for violating the provisions of international law and resolutions of international legitimacy. The importance of the search for international criminal and civil accountability of Israel for its human rights violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territories is important, as Palestine's accession to the International Criminal Court comes as an important step in terms of ending the impunity of Israeli war criminals in addition to prosecuting them wherever they are regardless of their nationality and the place where the crime was committed in accordance with universal jurisdiction. The problem of the research revolves around: How long will Israel remain without international accountability for its violations of the rights of citizens in the Occupied Palestinian Territory? The researcher followed the descriptive and analytical approach and reached a set of conclusions and recommendations, the most prominent of which are: holding Israel internationally responsible for its internationally wrongful actions in the occupied Palestinian territories represented by the violation of international obligations. Among the most prominent recommendations are the implementation of the recommendations of Amnesty International's report regarding the call of the International Criminal Court to consider the crime of apartheid as part of its investigations into the Palestinian situation before it and that all States exercise universal jurisdiction to bring the perpetrators of apartheid crimes to justice.
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Karolyi, Paul. "Chronology." Journal of Palestine Studies 46, no. 1 (2016): 1–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2016.46.1.s3.

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This is part 131 of a chronology begun in Journal of Palestine Studies 13, no. 3 (Spring 1984), and covers events from 16 May to 15 August 2016 on the ground in the occupied Palestinian territories and in the diplomatic sphere, regionally and internationally. The habba, or uprising, that began in Jerusalem in 9/2015 dissipated further as the Israeli government expanded its crackdown on the occupied Palestinian territories, the Israeli Left, and the Palestinian minority in Israel. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected international efforts to push Israel closer to peace talks with the Palestinians, instead shifting his ruling coalition further to the right. The French peace initiative advanced with Palestinian backing, despite Israeli opposition. Egypt lent its weight to international peace efforts, but failed to break the Palestinian-Israeli diplomatic impasse. Internally, the Palestinians prepared for municipal elections on 10/8/2016. Israel and Turkey reached a formal reconciliation agreement, paving the way for a return to full diplomatic relations. For a more comprehensive overview of regional and international developments related to the peace process, see the quarterly Update on Conflict and Diplomacy in JPS 46 (1).
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PARKER, P. "Israel HEALTH CARE IN THE OCCUPIED TERRITORIES." Lancet 325, no. 8441 (June 1985): 1321–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(85)92805-3.

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Fine, JonathanE. "Torture in Israel and the Occupied Territories." Lancet 342, no. 8864 (July 1993): 169. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0140-6736(93)91363-q.

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Cohen, Amichai. "Administering the Territories: An Inquiry into the Application of International Humanitarian Law by the IDF in the Occupied Territories." Israel Law Review 38, no. 3 (2005): 24–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021223700012814.

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This article seeks to evaluate Israel's implementation of the international law of occupation in the territories which it came to control after the Six-Day War, from a new perspective. Many scholars have criticized or justified specific Israeli policies by comparing them to specific norms of international law. Contrary to this scholarship, this article addresses the questions at the core of current debates over the implementation of international law: Why has Israel chosen to implement some specific rules of international law and to ignore others? And what caused the changes in Israel's implementation of international law?Some of the answers to these questions can be found by examining the interests of various institutions involved in the implementation of International law, and the interplay between them. I suggest that in order to understand Israel's initial behavior one must look at the interests, goals and culture of the Israeli army, the IDF, the institution initially responsible for administering the territories. I shall further argue that subsequent changes in policies are a result of the struggle between the IDF and other Israeli institutions attempting to gain influence over the way the territories were controlled.
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Gazit, Nir. "Military (Non-)Policing in the Occupied Territories." Israel Studies Review 35, no. 2 (September 1, 2020): 77–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/isr.2020.350206.

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Since 1967, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have been engaged in various military missions in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including occasional high-intensity fighting and counter-insurgency, as well as civilian duties, such as administration and policing. While existing literature emphasizes the organizational and professional burden this combination of duties places on the military, the actual forces that shape soldiers’ policing practices in the field remain largely unexamined. The present article offers a micro-sociological examination of the patterns of military policing implemented by Israeli soldiers in the West Bank. It explores the social and political forces that shape soldiers’ ‘logics of action’ and demonstrates the reciprocal relations between the IDF’s disparate modes of policing of Jewish settlers and Palestinians. Three clusters of factors shape these interrelations: the relationships between soldiers and settlers, the blurring between ‘security’ and ‘civilian’ missions, and situational variables. The research for this article was conducted between 2004 and 2018.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "TERRITORIES OCCUPIED BY ISRAEL"

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Bratchford, Gary. "Visual activism in Israel, the occupied Palestinian territories and Gaza." Thesis, Manchester Metropolitan University, 2016. http://e-space.mmu.ac.uk/618936/.

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How has the political visibility of Palestinians within the occupied West Bank and Gaza been constructed and managed by the Israeli occupation? How has the management of the Israeli field of vision and the distribution of Palestinian visibility shaped who can be seen, how and from what position? Focusing on the politics of visibility within Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including Gaza in a post-Second Intifada period (2005-2014), the thesis examines how anti-occupation activists employ visual digital technologies and online communication platforms to make the occupation, and its effect upon Palestinians, more visible to Israelis and international spectators. Concentrating on the collaborative nonviolent action between Palestinians, Israelis and international visual activists, the thesis identifies how antioccupation artists, activists and organizations have worked to creatively challenge the established regimes of visibility within Israel/Palestine. Taking into consideration the potential of new media technologies as a means of producing, enhancing and/or sharing a critically engaged perspective on the occupation, each chapter will highlight different collaborative processes undertaken in an effort to challenge the visual management of the occupation by the Israeli military and government. This study draws upon recent literature that prioritises the relationship between vision, visibility, power and social theory (Brighenti, 2010) and the politics of visibility in Israel/Palestine (Hochburg, 2015; Faulkner, 2014) to present visual activism as meaningful way of widening the space in which politics can be conceived, performed and represented. After situating the thesis in an appropriate context between visual culture and the politics of visibility, the thesis explores how visibility is structured around varying regimes that differ from context to context and are formed around a number of political, military and social mechanisms. Thereafter the four core chapters will examine how visual activism has been employed within the West Bank and Gaza, highlighting a range of geographical, social and political complexities that underpin the specific conditions of each case study. The first case study highlights how social media and various online platforms can be mobilized in an effort to raise awareness of an event to an international audience, namely the Bedouin village of Susiya and their campaign to remain on their lands. In this regard, visual activism is considered as a visibility making tool that is networked and multi platform. Moreover, the case of Susiya outlines the problematic nature of ‘creating the right image’ as well as attesting to how lesser considered images might have the most effect when circulated online. The second case study explores how the Internet was used successfully as a strategic tool to maximize the visibility of nonviolent resistance within the Village of Bil’in for a largely international audience. While the third case study identifies how visual activism and new media technologies can be imbedded within the act of protest as a means of enhancing and defining the visual outcome. Lastly, case study four reflects on the 2014 Israeli military operation in Gaza, commonly referred to as Operation Protective Edge, as a way to delineate the range of conditions related to the military occupation over Palestinian territories and the creative ways visual activism has worked to overcome these conditions in a very specific political space. The thesis examines and applies visual activism as a means of highlighting Palestinian visibility and the Palestinian struggle against the occupation through nonviolent, creative action. Distributed online, these collective efforts have been conceived for an internationally sympathetic audience rather than exclusively for Palestinian or Israeli web-users.
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Alba, Avril. "Water in Israel and the occupied territories : towards a comprehensive security agenda /." Title page, contents and abstract only, 1994. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09AR/09ara325.pdf.

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Ghandour-Demiri, Nada. "Disciplining popular resistance : the case of Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories." Thesis, University of Bristol, 2012. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.559472.

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This thesis examines popular resistance against the Israeli occupation. Its two central aims are: 1) to document current actions of nonviolent resistance; and 2) to de-romanticize nonviolence through a critical analysis of specific resistance actions and forms of population management. While nonviolent resistance in the Occupied Palestinian Territories exists today in plenty of forms, I argue that it is open to cooptation and accommodation by certain mechanisms of control. This in turn impacts the effectiveness of these resistance actions. This thesis, then, seeks to explore how nonviolent resistance against the Israeli occupation is conducted in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and what mechanisms of occupation and control it is trying to eliminate. It also seeks to understand how nonviolent resistance is being disciplined not only by the state of Israel but also by neo-liberal processes, and specifically, the process of NGO- ization. Therefore this project gives particular emphasis to the relation between forms of domination and forms of agency and how these two interact, impact and readapt to each other. Four central themes emerge throughout the thesis. First, the complex symbiosis between mechanisms of control and nonviolent resistance actions are highlighted through all four core chapters. Second, a detailed explanation of a large number of Israeli mechanisms of control demonstrates the sophistication of population management. In fact, three forms of population management become apparent: 1) population sorting (the systematic arrangement and rearrangement of human groupings facilitated through spatial reconfiguration and territorial fragmentation); 2) population containment (the incarceration and enclavization of Palestinian); and 3) population transfer (the relocation of human groupings through processes such as Judaization and de-Arabization). These three forms will help understand and categorize Israeli technologies of population management and reveal the complex and sophisticated Israeli matrix of control. The third theme emerging from this thesis is the disciplining of popular resistance through Israel's violent repression and matrix of control, but also through the conditional use of nonviolence imposed by Palestinian NGOs and foreign donors. Finally, the last theme is the Israeli perception of nonviolence as a threat. Rather than advocating a right or wrong way to resist, this thesis explores a form of resistance in itself. By analyzing it in relation to what it opposes and the ways in which it is being disciplined, it hopes to give emphasis to the importance of the right to resist under military occupation.
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Dumper, Michael R. T. "Muslim institutions and the Israeli state : Muslim religious endowments (waqfs) in Israel and the occupied territories 1948-1987." Thesis, University of Exeter, 1991. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.280700.

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Schmidt, Yvonne [Verfasser]. "Foundations of civil and political rights in Israel and the occupied territories / Yvonne Schmidt." München : GRIN Verlag, 2008. http://d-nb.info/1181339987/34.

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Desai, Thakira. "International humanitarian law violations occurring within the occupied Palestinian territories during the years 1982-2012." Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/5158.

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Magister Philosophiae - MPhil
The purpose of this mini-thesis is to address International Humanitarian Law (IHL) violations occurring within the Occupied Palestinian Territories relative to the protection of civilian persons in time of war. Importantly, various IHL violations that occur within the Green Line will be expanded upon. The mini-thesis will shed light on the lack of international action, specifically the inaction of the UN and the ICRC, in ending the decades of IHL violations by both the Israeli and Palestinian forces. As a means to an end, further destruction of property and loss of life that inhibits the quality of life of Palestinians and Israeli citizens trapped within the ongoing conflict, this mini-thesis will endeavour to provide solutions to ending the occupation. These solutions include: a UN Resolution directed toward the demolition of the wall; establishing permanent means of access to all basic needs; and lastly, addressing the influence of the United States of America (USA) and Egypt, respectively.
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Murphy, Emma C. "Israel and the occupied territories of the West Bank and Gaza Strip a case of internal colonialism /." Thesis, Boston Spa, U.K. : British Library Document Supply Centre, 1991. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?did=1&uin=uk.bl.ethos.293685.

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Milton-Edwards, Beverley Janette Potter. "The rise of the Islamic Movement in the West Bank and Gaza Strip since 1967." Thesis, University of Exeter, 1991. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.303300.

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Ranta, R. S. "The wasted decade : Israel's policies towards the Occupied Territories 1967-1977." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2009. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/19038/.

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This thesis aims to provide a detailed historical narrative of Israel’s relationship with the Occupied Territories between the years 1967 and 1977, using the most up-to-date archival material. The central argument of the thesis is that successive Israeli governments lacked a coherent and comprehensive long-term policy towards the Occupied Territories; it is the contention of this thesis that there is no documentary evidence to support the common belief that successive Israeli governments had a comprehensive long-term territorial policy. It is true that successive Israeli governments made decisions based on several long-term plans and approaches, such as the Allon Plan and the Functional Solution, but, when put into context and viewed as a whole, these decisions were neither coherent nor comprehensive and in any case were never formally adopted by the government. In trying to explain why successive governments failed to put forward a coherent and comprehensive long-term policy, four major contributing factors have been identified: the faction-based politics of the Labour Party, the US position vis-à-vis Israel, New Zionism and the intention of successive Prime Ministers to avoid formulating a clear long-term policy. The need to maintain unity, and avoid a split amongst the factions, ensured that the Labour Party was unable and unwilling to take a clear and unequivocal stand on the issue of the Occupied Territories; the US diplomatic stance vis-à-vis Israel exacerbated existing divisions, while strengthening the positions of those who argued in favour of avoiding taking clear decisions on the Occupied Territories; the rise of New Zionism changed the dynamics and landscape of the Israeli political system in a way that weakened Mapai’s, and later the Labour Party’s, ability to dictate territorial policy; lastly, successive Prime Ministers (Eshkol, Meir and Rabin) made clear choices against the formulation of a coherent and comprehensive long-term policy.
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Lingenfelder, Christian J. "The elephant in the room religious extremism in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2006. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion/06Mar%5FLingenfelder.pdf.

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Thesis (M.A. in National Security Affairs)--Naval Postgraduate School, March 2006.
Thesis Advisor(s): Daniel Moran. "March 2006." Includes bibliographical references (p.85-91). Also available online.
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Books on the topic "TERRITORIES OCCUPIED BY ISRAEL"

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International, Amnesty, ed. Israel and the Occupied Territories: The misuse of tear gas by Israeli army personnel in the Israeli Occupied Territories. New York, NY (322 8th Ave., New York 10001): Amnesty International, National Office, 1988.

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Kevin, O'Sullivan, ed. Israel and the occupied territories: The rough guide. London: Harrap-Columbus, 1989.

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Kevin, O'Sullivan, Cossali Paul, Fisher John 1958-, and Richardson, John, 1939 Apr. 27-, eds. Israel and the Occupied Territories: The Rough guide. London: Rough Guides, 1992.

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(Organization), Human Rights Watch, ed. Prison conditions in Israel and the occupied territories. New York: Human Rights Watch, 1991.

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Ariella, Azoulay, and Witte de With, centrum voor hedendaagse kunst, eds. New homes in Israel and the occupied territories. Rotterdam, the Netherlands: Witte de With, center for contemporary art, 2003.

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International Committee of the Red Cross., ed. Israel, the occupied territories and the autonomous territories: ICRC action since 1967. Geneva: ICRC, 1994.

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Yashuvi, Naʻamah. Activity of the undercover units in the occupied territories. Jerusalem: B'tselem, 1992.

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Amnesty International. Israel and the Occupied Territories: The military justice system in the Occupied Territories : detention, interrogation, and trial procedures. New York, N.Y. (322 8th Ave., New York 10001): Amnesty International USA, 1991.

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Benvenisti, Eyal. Legal dualism: The absorption of the occupied territories into Israel. Jerusalem: Jerusalem Post, 1989.

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Giller, Iris. Death foretold: Firing of "rubber" bullets to disperse demonstrations in the occupied territories. Jerusalem: B'tselem, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "TERRITORIES OCCUPIED BY ISRAEL"

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Kumaraswamy, P. R. "Occupied Territories." In The Arab-Israeli Conflict, 193–202. London: Routledge India, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003317197-19.

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Spitka, Timea. "Israeli National Protection Strategies and Realities." In National and International Civilian Protection Strategies in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, 29–70. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-20390-9_2.

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AbstractThis chapter unravels the enigmas between principles, practices and perceptions (PPP) of human security by Israeli authority within Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Actions in the name of security have justified severe security measures but under which circumstances have they had a positive or an inverse effect on the protection of vulnerable civilians? Unpacking security principles and practices of Israeli leadership, the IDF (Israel Defence Forces), Israeli police, secret service and non-state security agencies, this chapter examines the priorities and the effectiveness of protection of civilians. The chapter examines PPP of human protection based on documentation, surveys and interviews with national and international protectors.
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Geva, Maayan. "Introduction: Israel’s Management of the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) and International Humanitarian Law." In Law, Politics and Violence in Israel/Palestine, 1–29. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-34153-8_1.

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Hoare, Joanna, Catherine Hine, and Jamal Atamneh. "7. Women’s leadership in economic change in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Israel." In Women’s Leadership and Participation, 71–79. Rugby, Warwickshire, United Kingdom: Practical Action Publishing, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/9781780440477.007.

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Duval, Antoine. "Offside? Challenging the transnational legality of Israeli football activities in the Occupied Palestinian Territories." In The Legality of Economic Activities in Occupied Territories, 212–34. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2020. |: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429288081-10.

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Green, Penny, and Amelia Smith. "12. Evicting Palestine." In For Palestine, 193–210. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0345.13.

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Through the use of a number of case-studies we have documented a planned and intentionally complex set of criminal practices employed by the state of Israel to remove Palestinians from their historic lands. Those practices include: village destruction, house demolitions, the destruction of farmland and olive groves, land confiscation, access restrictions to natural resources, denial of residency rights and the denial of refugee return, all underpinned by a process now defined as Judaisation. These are facilitated through a range of formal and informal practices, notably discriminatory zoning and planning restrictions, the creation of militarised zones, forestation programmes, the illegal settlement programme, ‘unrecognising’ Palestinian villages, the separation wall, security checkpoints, service removal, a programme of Bedouin urbanisation, suppression of resistance and impunity for state and settler violence. We examined forced evictions not only inside the Occupied Palestinian Territories of East Jerusalem and the West Bank (Gaza was closed to us) but inside that part of mandated Palestine which became Israel, where 1.4 million Israeli Arabs/Palestinians still live, many under threat of forced eviction.
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Mahler, Gregory S. "United Nations: Human Rights in Palestine and Other Occupied Arab Territories (September 25, 2009)." In The Arab-Israeli Conflict, 514–24. 3rd ed. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003348948-114.

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Ziegler, Jean, Christophe Golay, Claire Mahon, and Sally-Anne Way. "The Occupied Palestinian Territories." In The Fight for the Right to Food, 175–93. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230299337_9.

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Shany, Yuval. "Head Against the Wall? Israel’s Rejection of the Advisory Opinion on the Legal Consequence of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territories." In Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, 352–72. The Hague: T.M.C. Asser Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-6704-763-0_10.

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Portugali, Juval. "Jewish Settlement in the Occupied Territories." In The GeoJournal Library, 113–41. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-1839-4_7.

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Conference papers on the topic "TERRITORIES OCCUPIED BY ISRAEL"

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Veretilnyk, Oleksandr. "Prospects for energy cooperation between the EU and Israel in the light of Israel's aggressive foreign policy in the Middle East." In 26th International Scientific Conference “Competitiveness and Innovation in the Knowledge Economy". Academy of Economic Studies of Moldova, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.53486/cike2022.19.

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This article presents the results of an analysis of energy cooperation between the EU and Israel, which is aimed at reducing the dependence of European states on Russian energy carriers. The need for getting rid of energy dependence on Russian oil, gas and coal among the EU member states arose after the invasion of Russian troops in Ukraine on February 24, 2022. The Russian-Ukrainian war led not only to the deterioration of Russian-Ukrainian relations, but also to the imposition of Western sanctions against Russia, a country that is the main supplier of energy to the European market. The desire to abandon Russian energy carriers forced the European states to look for new suppliers of oil, gas and coal. One of these suppliers decided to become Israel, which, according to Western human rights activists, is pursuing a policy of apartheid. The purpose of this study was to analyze the cooperation between the European Union and Israel in the field of natural gas supplies from the eastern Mediterranean Sea. During the study, the author came to the conclusion that this cooperation: 1) most likely will not help the countries of the European Union to fully compensate for the reduction in natural gas supplies from Russia; 2) carries risks for the reputation of the European Union as a defender of human rights and freedoms in the world (because Israel continues to pursue an aggressive foreign policy in the Middle East, continues to occupy and annex the territories of neighboring states, build illegal Jewish settlements in the occupied territories11 of Palestine and Syria, conduct apartheid, commit politically motivated assassinations of their critics).
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El-Atrash, Ahmad A., Hilmi S. Salem, Jad E. Isaac, Adolfo Santini, and Nicola Moraci. "Disaster Mitigation Towards Sustainable Development in the Occupied Palestinian Territories." In 2008 SEISMIC ENGINEERING CONFERENCE: Commemorating the 1908 Messina and Reggio Calabria Earthquake. AIP, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2963831.

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Mumcuoglu, Kosta Y. "Vectorial capacity ofRhipicephalus sanguineusin Israel and the Palestinian Territories." In 2016 International Congress of Entomology. Entomological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1603/ice.2016.110994.

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Dubnytska, M., L. Datsenko, and S. Titova. "Land and Legal Relations Reconstruction in the De-Occupied Territories of Ukraine." In International Conference of Young Professionals «GeoTerrace-2023». European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.2023510115.

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Shuleva, Nevena, and Konstantin Kolev. "DETECTING THE INFLUENCE OF FORESTS ON WATER RESOURCES IN BULGARIA." In 22nd International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference 2022. STEF92 Technology, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2022v/3.2/s14.34.

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Bulgarian forests are part of the national wealth and national identity. Their economic, social and ecological functions are important for the sustainable development of society and for improvement of living conditions especially in rural and mountainous regions. To a large extent these functions are irreplaceable not only in a national but also in a global aspect. In this connection in the present paper a structural-functional characterization of Bulgarian forest territories is done. Actual data on the area of forests, wood stock, wood increment and distribution of forests by functions are presented. Regarding the last one, the attention is focused on concise characteristics of forests with water protection functions on the territory of Bulgaria and water resources of the country. On the basis of the above, the guiding hypothesis for the study is formulated, namely: there is a correlation between the area of forest territories in Bulgaria and the territory occupied by water and water bodies. The verification is carried out by means of a correlation analysis, which is based on data from the National Statistical Institute (NSI) on the areas of forest territories and territories occupied by water and water bodies in 23 districts from level NUTS-3 in Bulgaria in 2021. Regarding the area occupied by water and water bodies, it should be clarified that according to NSI it includes plots for watercourses, water bodies and available water facilities.
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Lalayan, I. R., and E. I. Vereshchagina. "TRENDS IN CONVERSION OF TERRITORIES OF OBJECTS OF TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE INTO RECREATIONAL ZONES." In INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES IN SCIENCE AND EDUCATION. ООО «ДГТУ-Принт» Адрес полиграфического предприятия: 344003, г. Ростов-на-Дону, пл. Гагарина,1., 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.23947/itse.2023.228-233.

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The article deals with the study of transport infrastructure areas that have partially or completely lost their original function and are in need of revitalization, modernization and development. Examples from domestic and foreign practice on the state of such objects are carried out, problem points are identified. The experience of transformation of depressed territories in Russia and abroad is analyzed. As a result of the analysis, the main methods of solving the transformation of depressed territories and the possibility of introducing such territories into the urban development concept of the city are identified. The possibility of applying this technique in the transformation of territories occupied by garage cooperatives is considered and the concept of a project for optimizing the use of territories of garage arrays in the city of Stavropol is proposed.
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Nikitiuk, О. V., and P. О. Nikitiuk. "The role of international aid in humanitarian demining of the de-occupied territories of Ukrainе." In THE WAR IN UKRAINE – A CHALLENGE TO EURO-ATLANTIC CIVILIZATIONAL VALUES. Baltija Publishing, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.30525/978-9934-26-451-1-15.

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Trofymchuk, Oleksandr, Vyacheslav Vishnyakov, Natalia Sheviakina, Viktoriia Klymenko, and Snizhana Zahorodnia. "ANALYSIS OF IMPACTS OF WAR ON ECOSYSTEMS OF PROTECTED AREAS UKRAINE." In 23rd SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference 2023. STEF92 Technology, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2023v/3.2/s14.36.

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The article presents the results of satellite remote sensing to assess the consequences of hostilities in nature protected areas. Since February 24, 2022, 20% of the nature reserve fund of Ukraine has suffered from the war. The real level of damage to the objects of the nature reserve fund as a result of the war cannot be estimated. After all, active hostilities continue, and restrictions are created for environmental activities in the temporarily occupied territories. Therefore, remote monitoring is the only tool for studying changes in the occupied protected areas and territories on the front line. To analyze satellite data, advanced image processing methods were used, including algorithms for detecting changes and classification based on a series of satellite images of the Sentinel-2A, SkySat and WorldView 01-03 missions, with a spatial resolution of 10 to 0.5 meters. It was found in places of violation of the surface layer of soil by vents, numerous fortifications (trenches, trenches, dugouts), burned out, the tracks were formed due to the active movement of military equipment. The obtained result makes it possible to understand which territories are most affected by hostilities, including the destruction of vegetation, changes in soil cover. The results of the study contribute to understanding the environmental consequences of hostilities and are a valuable tool for managing the environment for post-war recovery in Ukraine.
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Hussein -Abdel Razeq, Anwar. "Palestinian English Teachers in the Occupied Territories: Music, Moral Responsibility, and Socio-Emotional Challenges and Resiliency." In 2021 AERA Annual Meeting. Washington DC: AERA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1687972.

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Kyryliuk, M., and E. Bondarenko. "Cartographic Monitoring of the State of Natural Reserve Fund Objects of Ukraine in Temporarily Occupied Territories." In 17th International Conference Monitoring of Geological Processes and Ecological Condition of the Environment. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.2023520197.

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Reports on the topic "TERRITORIES OCCUPIED BY ISRAEL"

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Pelletiere, Stephen C. Hamas and Hizbollah: The Radical Challenge to Israel in the Occupied Territories. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, November 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada288849.

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Parker, Timothy J. Preparing for the Inevitable: Examining Future U.S. Peacekeeping in Israel and the Occupied Territories Through the Lens of the Sinai and Lebanon Peacekeeping Missions. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada429269.

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Brink, Kaylee. Palestinian Opinion on Peace: Analysis of Survey Data from the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Portland State University Library, January 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/honors.255.

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Drapak, Mykhailo. ECMI Minorities Blog. Indigenous Peoples and National Minorities in the Temporarily Occupied Territories of Ukraine. European Centre for Minority Issues, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.53779/mnup4223.

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On February 24, 2022, Russia launched an offensive against Ukraine simultaneously in the north, east and south of the country. Thus, Russian troops expanded their temporary occupation of Ukrainian territories, which began in 2014. Millions of Ukrainian citizens, including indigenous peoples and national minorities, found themselves in the temporarily occupied territories. Residents of those regions are suffering a lack of food, utilities and medical care, and live under the pressure of the Russian troops, namely are deprived of the right to express their opposition to the invasion by detaining, intimidating, torturing and executing. Under such conditions, the usual policy of diversity management is reduced to the struggle for the life of every citizen. This blog piece is dedicated to the current situation in the temporarily occupied regions of Ukraine inhabited by the communities of indigenous peoples and national minorities.
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Dyke, A. S., J. E. Campbell, and G. Lauzon. Surficial geology, Abitau Lake, Northwest Territories, NTS 75-B. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/330072.

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The Abitau Lake map area lies in the Rae Province of the Canadian Shield. Quaternary deposits are extensive and thick, with bedrock outcrop concentrated in the northwest and southwest. Till is extensively streamlined to the west-southwest by late deglacial ice flow from the Keewatin Ice Divide. The region is incised by west-southwest flowing subglacial meltwater corridors that extend across the map area, spaced 5 to 15 km apart. The ice flow chronology (Figure 1) is recorded both in the landforms and in the striae record. Rare measurements record an old flowset oriented northwest-southeast. Well defined indicators in cross-cutting relationships reveal a regional clockwise rotation in ice-flow directions evolving from an old southward to a late deglacial westward flow. Short-lived proglacial lakes, as evidenced by wave-cut scarps, terraced outwash, ice-contact deltas, and patches of glacial lake sediments, occupied a paleodrainage area not only of Hudson Bay but possibly also the headwaters of the Mackenzie River.
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Pretari, Alexia. Resilience in the West Bank: Impact evaluation of the ‘From Emergency Food Security to Durable Livelihoods: Building Resilience in the Occupied Palestinian Territory’ project. Oxfam GB, October 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2021.8106.

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The ‘From Emergency Food Security to Durable Livelihoods: Building Resilience in the Occupied Palestinian Territories’ project was implemented in the West Bank, in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, between November 2015 and January 2018 by Oxfam, together with two partners: the Land Research Centre (LRC) and the Palestinian Livestock Development Centre (PLDC). The project, funded by the Belgian Cooperation, through Oxfam Italy, focused on improving protection around three key areas at community level to build resilience: supporting animal health, rehabilitating protected rangelands and strengthening community-based legal protection mechanisms. The combination of these key areas is the focus of this Effectiveness Review: the evaluation assesses the impact of this cross-sectorial approach on the resilience capacities of male and female members of Bedouin communities in the West Bank, at risk of displacement. It combines a quantitative quasi-experimental design with a questionnaire with community leaders. Find out more by reading the full report now.
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DOĞRUL, Mürsel, and Hayati ÜNLÜ. TÜBA Filistin - İsrail Savaşı Raporu. Türkiye Bilimler Akademisi, December 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.53478/tuba.978-625-8352-81-8.

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"This report, compiled with the initiatives of TÜBA International Relations Working Group, analyses the historical, current and future dimensions of the Israeli- Palestinian War in the light of theoretical literature and recent data. On 7 October 2023, the armed attacks by the military wing of Hamas targeting Israeli settlers and the ‘Operation Iron Swords’ launched by Israel in response to the attacks caused serious concerns in the international community in the context of humanitarian crisis and global chaos. The multi-actor nature, impact and historical origins of the Palestinian-Israeli War have made it necessary to examine this issue once again by focusing on historical ruptures. Israel’s disproportionate reprisals, violations of established international norms and laws of war/conflict, and attacks on civilians, including hospitals, have had/are having serious repercussions on international relations and the Middle East region in particular. The report’s findings indicate that the events in the region have led to a realization of the humanitarian crises in the Palestinian territories. This has resulted in a shift away from the traditional poweroriented pro-Israel stance, following domestic protests by countries that rejected the humanitarian tragedy in the Gaza Strip. However, due to the unfair structural and institutional bias of national and international politics, individual, academic and scientific freedom is still under extreme pressure to protect Israel."
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TÜBA REPORT ON THE PALESTINIAN-ISRAELI WAR. Türkiye Bilimler Akademisi, December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.53478/tuba.978-625-8352-82-5.

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"This report, compiled with the initiatives of TÜBA International Relations Working Group, analyses the historical, current and future dimensions of the Israeli-Palestinian War in the light of theoretical literature and recent data. On 7 October 2023, the armed attacks by the military wing of Hamas targeting Israeli settlers and the ‘Operation Iron Swords’ launched by Israel in response to the attacks caused serious concerns in the international com- munity in the context of humanitarian crisis and global chaos. The multi-a- ctor nature, impact and historical origins of the Palestinian-Israeli War have made it necessary to examine this issue once again by focusing on historical ruptures. Israel’s disproportionate reprisals, violations of established inter- national norms and laws of war/conflict, and attacks on civilians, including hospitals, have had/are having serious repercussions on international rela- tions and the Middle East region in particular. The report’s findings indicate that the events in the region have led to an awareness of the humanitarian crises in the Palestinian territories. This has resulted in a shift away from the traditional power-oriented pro-Israel stance, following domestic protests by countries that rejected the humanitarian tragedy in the Gaza Strip. However, due to the unfair structural and institutional bias of national and internati- onal policy, individual, academic and freedom of expression are still under extreme pressure to protect Israel."
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DOĞRUL, Mürsel, and Hayati ÜNLÜ, eds. TUBA takrir el-Harbi’l-Filistiniyye’l-İsrailiyye. Turkish Academy of Sciences, January 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.53478/tuba.978-625-8352-90-0.

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"This report, compiled with the initiatives of TÜBA International Relations Working Group, analyses the historical, current and future dimensions of the Israeli-Palestinian War in the light of theoretical literature and recent data. On 7 October 2023, the armed attacks by the military wing of Hamas targeting Israeli settlers and the ‘Operation Iron Swords’ launched by Israel in response to the attacks caused serious concerns in the international com- munity in the context of humanitarian crisis and global chaos. The multi-a- ctor nature, impact and historical origins of the Palestinian-Israeli War have made it necessary to examine this issue once again by focusing on historical ruptures. Israel’s disproportionate reprisals, violations of established inter- national norms and laws of war/conflict, and attacks on civilians, including hospitals, have had/are having serious repercussions on international rela- tions and the Middle East region in particular. The report’s findings indicate that the events in the region have led to an awareness of the humanitarian crises in the Palestinian territories. This has resulted in a shift away from the traditional power-oriented pro-Israel stance, following domestic protests by countries that rejected the humanitarian tragedy in the Gaza Strip. However, due to the unfair structural and institutional bias of national and internati- onal policy, individual, academic and freedom of expression are still under extreme pressure to protect Israel."
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Sergeyev, Mykola. Ukrainian National Idea in the Modern Ukrainian Media Space. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2022.51.11407.

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M. Sergeyev’s article “Ukrainian National Idea in the Modern Ukrainian Media Space” states that modern Ukrainian philosophical thought tries to get rid of the flaws and stereotypes of its one-sided orientation “to the East” and tries to establish a European orientation in the minds of Ukrainian citizens. The theoretical proof of the new worldview took place throughout the formation of the Ukrainian state from Little Russia to Ukraine and presents its actual struggle for independence. It is an integral concept that reflects the process of forming theories and views of prominent Ukrainian thinkers on the place and role of Ukrainians in the becoming and development of an independent Ukrainian state. As O. Zabuzhko emphasizes, “all Ukrainian philosophical, historical, sociological thought of the past and our centuries (including the diaspora) is permeated with the sacred idea of nationalism”. The author concludes that the logic of the historical development of the Ukrainian national idea reveals only one model of its socio-political future, which implies the need for Ukraine’s integration into the European and world community. This path requires the moral and political readiness of the entire Ukrainian society for its implementation and prevents the emergence of any other - alternative ideas. Solving this problem is complicated by the need to return to Ukraine the temporarily occupied territories of Crimea, Luhansk and Donetsk regions. Of course, this model will lead to significant political and economic tensions in society (the final severance of economic relations with Russia, the closure of non-competitive industries, the outflow of labor to the west). At the same time, the orientation of the Ukrainian national idea to the west will increase competition in all branches of production and will be a condition for further self-improvement of Ukrainian society.
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