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Palestinian Refugees: The Human Dimension of the Middle East Peace Process

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2017

Donna E. Arzt*
Affiliation:
College of Law, Syracuse University

Abstract

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Type
Regional and Global Implications of the Arab-Israeli Peace Process
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1995

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References

1 Arzt, Donna E. and Zughaib, Karen, Return to the Negotiated Lands: The Likelihood and Legality of a Population Transfer Between Israel and a Future Palestinian State, Nyu J. Int’l L. & Pol. 1399 (1992)Google Scholar.

2 See Hannum, Hurst, The Right to Leave and Return in International Law (1987)Google Scholar.

3 See Lee, Luke T., The Right to Compensation: Refugees and Countries of Asylum, 80 AJ1L 532 (1986)Google Scholar.

4 Peretz, Don, Palestinians, Refugees, and the Middle East Peace Process (1993)Google Scholar. See also Peretz, Don, The Question of Compensation, in Center for Policy Analysis on Palestine, Palestinian Refugees: Their Problems and Future 15 (October 1994)Google Scholar.

5 See, e.g., de Zayas, Alfred M., Population, Expulsion and Transfer, 8 Encyc. Pub Int’l L. 438 (1985)Google Scholar.

6 At the Lausanne Conference under UN sponsorship in 1949, Israel offered to accept the return of 100,000 Palestinians, if it could determine where in Israel they would live and if they were security risks. See Nbii. Caplan, The Lausanne Conference, 1949: A Case Study in Middle East Peacemaking, 92–95 (1993).