2000
DOI: 10.1080/00263200008701318
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At the roots of division: a new perspective on Arabs and Jews, 1930–39

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Cited by 16 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Even later, when British policy was not always favorable to the Zionist political cause, it generally favored Jewish industrial development in the economic sphere. 27 The British and the Zionists did not always see eye to eye on the political future of Palestine, but each considered the other an ally in relation to the "non-Western" inhabitants of the territory.…”
Section: " T H E L a N D ' S P Ro D U C T S " : E T H N I C O R T E Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Even later, when British policy was not always favorable to the Zionist political cause, it generally favored Jewish industrial development in the economic sphere. 27 The British and the Zionists did not always see eye to eye on the political future of Palestine, but each considered the other an ally in relation to the "non-Western" inhabitants of the territory.…”
Section: " T H E L a N D ' S P Ro D U C T S " : E T H N I C O R T E Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…20 The British officially rejected ethnonational economic separatism in Palestine, taking the position that "such distinction [between Arabs and Jews] could not, in fact, be made for fiscal purposes in a community where there is no geographical or economic separation between the two great homogeneous groups." 27 The British and the Zionists did not always see eye to eye on the political future of Palestine, but each considered the other an ally in relation to the "non-Western" inhabitants of the territory. For example, when calculating the yearly quota of Jewish immigration certificates, which was linked to the unemployment rate in Palestine, the British considered the overall unemployment in the territory, in opposition to the Zionist demand to consider Jewish unemployment alone.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%