ACADEMIC JOURNALS & ARTICLES
FOUNDATIONAL ACADEMIC JOURNALS
The most important peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated exclusively to Palestinian affairs. Published since 1971 by the University of California Press in association with the Institute for Palestine Studies. Covers history, politics, law, culture, and current affairs. Widely available through university libraries and partially accessible free at www.tandfonline.com/journals/rpal20.
Published by Edinburgh University Press, this journal focuses specifically on the history, archaeology, culture, and politics of historic Palestine. Particularly strong on pre-1948 history and cultural heritage.
An interdisciplinary journal that provides the theoretical framework many scholars use to analyze the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Essential for understanding the academic debate around settler colonialism as a lens for Palestinian dispossession.
A peer-reviewed journal covering Arab world politics, culture, and society with substantial coverage of Palestinian issues. Published by Pluto Journals and available through most university library systems.
KEY ACADEMIC ARTICLES
Published in the European Journal of International Law, this landmark article makes the legal case that Israeli practices in the occupied territories constitute apartheid under international law. Widely cited by human rights organizations and legal scholars.
Published in Foreign Affairs — one of the most widely read policy journals in the world. Four leading Middle East scholars argue that the two-state solution has effectively ended and examine what comes next. Freely available at foreignaffairs.com.
Israeli historian Benny Morris's landmark reassessment of the 1948 war and the creation of the Palestinian refugee crisis. Controversial but essential — Morris is one of the most cited historians on this period regardless of political perspective.
12. "Digital Occupation: The Role of Technology in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict" — Helga Tawil-Souri (2012) Published in the Journal of Palestine Studies, this article was among the first academic examinations of how digital infrastructure and technology are used as tools of occupation and control over Palestinian movement and communication.