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ID190432
Title ProperLand for Peace? Game Theory and the Strategic Impediments to a Resolution in Israel-Palestine
LanguageENG
AuthorAhmad, Amal
Summary / Abstract (Note)Why have Israel and the Palestinians failed to implement a ‘land for peace’ solution, along the lines of the Oslo Accords? This paper studies the application of strategic behavior models, in the form of games, to this question. I show that existing models of the conflict largely rely on unrealistic assumptions about what the main actors are trying to achieve. Specifically, they assume that Israel is strategically interested in withdrawing from the occupied territories pending resolvable security concerns but that it is obstructed from doing so by violent Palestinians with other objectives. I use historical analysis along with bargaining theory to shed doubt on this assumption and to argue that the persistence of conflict has been aligned with, not contrary to, the interests of the militarily powerful party, Israel. The analysis helps explain, from a strategic behavior perspective, why resolutions like the Oslo Accords, which rely on the land for peace paradigm and on self-enforcement, have failed to create peace.
`In' analytical NoteDefence and Peace Economics Vol. 34, No.4; Jun 2023: p.385-409
Journal SourceDefence and Peace Economics Vol: 34 No 4
Key WordsInternational Conflict ;  Game Theory ;  Israel-Palestine ;  Strategic Behavior ;  Land for Peace


 
 
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