Loeffler on the UDHR, the Genocide Convention, and the 1948 Israeli-Arab War

James Loeffler, University of Virginia, has published Three days in December: Jewish human rights between the United Nations and the middle east in 1948, in the Journal of Global History (2021), 1–19:

The twin birth of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UN Genocide Convention in 1948 have received enormous scholarly attention in recent years. Yet historians have largely ignored how these legal projects intersected with that year’s war in Israel/Palestine. In this article, I push these two stories back into a single frame by examining the year-long efforts of one early human rights organization, the World Jewish Congress, to advance rights-claims on behalf of Middle Eastern Jewish communities imperiled by the regional repercussions of the war. The WJC’s record of activities affords us a direct window into contemporaneous activist understandings of the ties between the Holocaust and the Nakba, human rights and genocide, and international law and politics. More broadly, it reveals the intrinsic limits of early human rights advocacy in an emerging global system exclusively structured around nation states.

–Dan Ernst

Loeffler on the UDHR, the Genocide Convention, and the 1948 Israeli-Arab War Loeffler on the UDHR, the Genocide Convention, and the 1948 Israeli-Arab War Reviewed by Mr X on November 19, 2021 Rating: 5

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