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2021 | 2 (50) | 77-88

Article title

The Boundaries of Jerusalem

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
Earlier this year, President Donald Trump presented his Peace Plan for Israel and the Palestinians. The plan also dealt with the future boundaries of Jerusalem. Jerusalem is the only city ruled by a sovereign regime, the State of Israel, which declared Jerusalem as its Capital city and draw its boundary lines. Except for the US, the status and boundaries of Jerusalem are not accepted by any other international or national entity. Only the United States, which accepts Jerusalem as the capital city of Israel, agreed to accept its Israeli declared boundaries. Jerusalem’s status and boundaries stand at the core of the dispute between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, which wishes to restore the pre-1967 line. The city of Jerusalem was divided during the years 1948-1967 between Israel and Jordan. The Palestinian Authority thus calls for a separation of Jerusalem between two independent states. Today, Jerusalem has an urban boundary that serves partly as a separating line between Israel and the Palestinian Autonomy, but most countries do not accept the present boundaries, and its future permanent line and status are far from establishing. Jerusalem is a unique city. This article presents a brief history that should help understanding its uniqueness.

Year

Issue

Pages

77-88

Physical description

Dates

published
2021

Contributors

author
  • Tel Aviv University (Israel)

References

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  • Lapidot, R. (1994). Jerusalem: The Legal and Political Background. Justice, 3, 7–14.
  • Michael, K. & Ramon, A. (2004). A Fence Around Jerusalem. Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies.
  • Prawer, J. (1976). Jerusalem in Crusader Days. In Y. Yadin (Ed.), Jerusalem Revealed (pp. 102–107). Israel Exploration Society.
  • President of USA. (2020). Peace to Prosperity – A vision to improve the lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People.
  • Reiter, Y. (2017/18). How to live together with the clashing narrative over Holy Places. Palestine-Israel Journal, 22/23(4), 65-73.
  • Romann, M. & Weingrod, A. (1991). Living together Separately: Arabs and Jews in Contemporary Jerusalem. Princeton University Press.
  • Stein, L. (1961). The Balfour Declaration. Simon & Schuster.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

Biblioteka Nauki
2020145

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-doi-10_15804_ppsy202108
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