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Good Neighbourly Relations

Good Neighbourly Relations Jordan, Israel and the 1994-2004 Peace Process

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Library of Modern Middle East Studies

Good Neighbourly Relations

Jordan, Israel and the 1994-2004 Peace Process

Dona J. Stewart

Political Science / International Relations / General

In 1994 Jordan became the second Arab country to sign a peace agreement with Israel and set out to create a 'warm peace', and not just an end to hostilities. As such, the treaty sought to stimulate extensive networks of bilateral economic, cultural, societal and security relationships. Dona Stewart argues that, while the treaty itself remains intact, relations between the two states have far from fulfilled expectations. The decade that followed the treaty was turbulent, as the Oslo process collapsed, Rabin was assassinated, violence between Palestinians and Israel escalated and peace failed to deliver expected dividends to Jordan. Stewart approaches this subject through both Jordanian and Israeli perspectives, dissecting the challenges to establishing 'good neighbourly relations' and the obstacles that have prevented the idea of peace from filtering down from government and into the rest of society.
Dona Stewart is the director of the Middle East Center for Peace, Culture and Development at Georgia State University, Atlanta and associate professor of Geography. She is a former Fulbright Scholar in Jordan and Visiting Scholar at the Amman Center for Peace and Development.

Publication Date: 28 February 2012
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: I.B. Tauris
ISBN-13: 9781848859708
Format: Paperback softback
Page Count: 232
Weight (oz): 9.44

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