Essays

The Price of Reintegrating Syria? Become Israel and America’s Slave

The British Mandate for Palestine: Law, Authority and the Limits of International Legitimacy

A People Made to Endure: Law, Memory and the Architecture of Palestinian Trauma

Jerusalem, Law, and Memory: The 1930 Ruling on the Buraq Wall

Suicidal Empathy and the Structure of Dependency

When Markets Begin Pricing Imperial Uncertainty

The Day Jerusalem Learns Who May Walk Freely

The Morning After Barakah

Colonial Armies and the Architecture of 1948

The Mandate as Administrative Afterlife

The Grammar of an Ongoing Nakba

The Administration of Reality

Facts Become Claims

Riyadh’s Wager

Cyprus

Oslo

Annexation

Apocalypse Alliance

Decline

The Alliance No Longer Hides

Empathy Management

Killing Like It’s 1967

When Markets Begin Pricing Imperial Uncertainty

The Morning After Barakah

The Day Jerusalem Learns Who May Walk Freely

Colonial Armies and the Myth of 1948

The Mandate as Administrative Afterlife

When International Law Becomes Politically Intolerable

The Comoros and Sovereignty as Interface

The Ongoing Nakba: Why a Grammar Matters

Ceremony Without Concession

The Forgotten War That Ended Britain’s Rule in Palestine

The Administration of Reality