Say Yes to What's Next
- 240 pages
- 9 hours of reading
Lori Allen helps women rediscover their worth as she encourages them to age well with style and sass.
Lori Allen's scholarship delves into the intricacies of Palestinian politics, exploring themes of nationalism, violence, gender, and human rights. Her work critically examines the political practices and discourses within Palestinian society, specifically how concepts of rights and suffering have shaped political discourse from the 1920s to the present. Through her ethnographic and historical inquiries, she offers profound insights into the complex dynamics of power, resistance, and human experience in the occupied territories.



Lori Allen helps women rediscover their worth as she encourages them to age well with style and sass.
Explores the dialectic of cynicism and hope and the role of human rights in the production of rule in the occupied Palestinian territories.
This book offers a provocative retelling of Palestinian political history through an examination of the international commissions that have investigated political violence and human rights violations. More than twenty commissions have been convened over the last century, yet no significant change has resulted from these inquiries. The findings of the very first, the 1919 King-Crane Commission, were suppressed. The Mitchell Committee, convened in the heat of the Second Intifada, urged Palestinians to listen more sympathetically to the feelings of their occupiers. And factfinders returning from a shell-shocked Gaza Strip in 2008 registered their horror at the scale of the destruction, but Gazans have continued to live under a crippling blockade. Drawing on debates in the press, previously unexamined UN reports, historical archives, and ethnographic research, Lori Allen explores six key investigative commissions over the last century. She highlights how Palestinians' persistent demands for independence have been routinely translated into the numb language of reports and resolutions. These commissions, Allen argues, operating as technologies of liberal global governance, yield no justice—only the oppressive status quo. A History of False Hope issues a biting critique of the captivating allure and cold impotence of international law.