The United States Should ‘Govern’ the World?
It might not have seemed necessary in the 21st century to ask or answer such a ridiculous...
Read MoreRichard Falk is an international law and international relations scholar who taught at Princeton University for forty years. Since 2002 he has lived in Santa Barbara, California, and taught at the local campus of the University of California in Global and International Studies and since 2005 chaired the Board of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. From 2008 until May 2014, he was the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967.
Posted by Richard Falk | Jan 23, 2014 | News & Analysis, US |
It might not have seemed necessary in the 21st century to ask or answer such a ridiculous...
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Jan 5, 2014 | Europe, Middle East, News & Analysis, Palestine, US |
2013 was not a happy year in the chronicles of human history, yet there were a few moves in the directions of peace and justice.
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Jan 1, 2014 | Palestine, Viewpoints |
We can hope that that the UN in 2014 will give the International Year of Solidarity with the Palestinian People a political meaning that goes beyond words.
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Jan 1, 2014 | Palestine, Viewpoints |
No recent Palestinian prisoner has received more attention among the Palestinian than Samer Issawi, released on December 23 after reaching an extraordinary bargain with prison officials last April. He agreed then to stop his hunger strike, which had lasted an incredible 266 days, either partially or completely, in exchange for an Israeli pledge to release him in eight months at the end of 2013.
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Dec 24, 2013 | News & Analysis, Palestine, US |
, Palestine is expected to give up fundamental rights while Israel is supposed to abandon some relatively minor unlawful aspects of its prolonged occupation
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Dec 19, 2013 | News & Analysis, Palestine |
In the Palestinian struggle, battles will not be won by military superiority, but prevailing in ideas of justice, as exhibited in the growing BDS Campaign.
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Dec 9, 2013 | Africa, Palestine, Viewpoints |
The Palestinian people, in the midst of their seemingly endless ordeal, have particularly reason to esteem the exemplary life and solidarity exhibited by Nelson Mandela for their cause.
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Dec 6, 2013 | Europe, Regions, US, Viewpoints |
The more contact one has with the modern state, the more grounds there are for deep and growing concern.
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Dec 2, 2013 | Palestine, Reviews, US |
My friend and former collaborator, Howard Friel, has written an intriguing book contrasting the worldviews and polemical styles of two Jewish American intellectuals with world class reputations, Noam Chomsky and Alan Dershowitz (Friel, Chomsky and Dershowitz: On Endless War and the End of Civil Liberties, Olive Branch Press, 2014). The book is much more than a comparison of two influential voices, one critical the other apologetic, with respect to the Israel/Palestine struggle and the subordination of private liberties to the purveyors of state-led security at home and abroad. Friel convincingly favors Chomsky’s approach both with respect to the substance of their fundamental disagreements and in relation to sharply contrasting styles of argument.
Read MorePosted by Richard Falk | Nov 18, 2013 | Asia Pacific, News & Analysis |
There is a temptation to suggest that political life in Turkey and Egypt are both being victimized by a similar deepening of polarization between Islamic and secular orientations, and to some extent this is true, but it is also misleading.
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