Law and Identity in Mandate Palestine

Law and Identity in Mandate Palestine

by Assaf Likhovski
Law and Identity in Mandate Palestine

Law and Identity in Mandate Palestine

by Assaf Likhovski

eBook

$26.49  $29.99 Save 12% Current price is $26.49, Original price is $29.99. You Save 12%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

One of the major questions facing the world today is the role of law in shaping identity and in balancing tradition with modernity. In an arid corner of the Mediterranean region in the first decades of the twentieth century, Mandate Palestine was confronting these very issues. Assaf Likhovski examines the legal history of Palestine, showing how law and identity interacted in a complex colonial society in which British rulers and Jewish and Arab subjects lived together.

Law in Mandate Palestine was not merely an instrument of power or a method of solving individual disputes, says Likhovski. It was also a way of answering the question, "Who are we?" British officials, Jewish lawyers, and Arab scholars all turned to the law in their search for their identities, and all used it to create and disseminate a hybrid culture in which Western and non-Western norms existed simultaneously. Uncovering a rich arsenal of legal distinctions, notions, and doctrines used by lawyers to mediate between different identities, Likhovski provides a comprehensive account of the relationship between law and identity. His analysis suggests a new approach to both the legal history of Mandate Palestine and colonial societies in general.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807877180
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 12/08/2006
Series: Studies in Legal History
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Assaf Likhovski is associate professor at Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law. He is coeditor of The History of Law in a Multicultural Society: Israel, 1917-1967 and The Courts of Law: Fifty Years of Adjudication in Israel.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

This is a fascinating, engaging, accessible and evocative book, which takes the study of Mandate Palestine into a new direction.—The Modern Law Review



Intriguing. . . . Likhovski's excellent study is another example of Israeli legal history's coming of age.—Law and History Review



Likhovski's work is a rich and most welcome contribution. . . . Law and Identity in Mandate Palestine has an assured place in every library on the history of the Palestine Mandate.—Journal of Israeli History



This is a bold, rich, and intellectually pathbreaking study of the interaction between law and identity in mandatory Palestine. Through a deep immersion in the legal history of all the actors involved, Likhovski brings to life the complexities and contradictions of a fascinating historical reality often treated only through polemical lenses.—Michael Stanislawski, Columbia University



At once a meticulous study of the plural cultures of law that developed during the British Mandate and a meditation on the uses to which a colonialist paradigm has been put hitherto in understanding them, Law and Identity in Mandate Palestine places Assaf Likhovski's imprint squarely on the conceptual map of Palestine and on the new Israeli legal history. Likhovski's unparalleled research opens us to a narrative of multiple acts of self-construction in which Jews, Arabs, and imperial officials used law to define both themselves and others. What we are tempted to see only in black and white appears here as a multifaceted mosaic of purposes and possibilities. Always scholarly, never naive, but ultimately—some might find astonishingly—hopeful, this sophisticated history also plants tiny seeds of acknowledgment and reconciliation in a desperately divided land.—Christopher Tomlins, American Bar Foundation

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews