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One-state solution

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From the river to the sea
political catchphrase referring to the region between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea
one-state solution
proposed resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict involving a single state with both Israelis and Palestinians as citizens
White Paper of 1939
1939 statement of British policy in Palestine
Abu Ali Mustapha Brigades
armed wing of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
Abu Ali Mustafa
Palestinian politician (1938-2001)
Judah Leon Magnes
Reform rabbi (1877-1948)
Ihud
Ihud (also spelled “Ichud”, Hebrew: איחוד, 'Unity') was a small binationalist Zionist political party founded by Judah Leon Magnes, Martin Buber, Ernst Simon and Henrietta Szold, former supporters of Brit Shalom, in 1942 as a binational response to the Biltmore Conference, which made the establishment of a Jewish Commonwealth in Palestine the policy of the Zionist movement. Other prominent members were David Werner Senator, Moshe Smilansky, agronomist (1868–1947), and Judge Joseph Moshe Valero.
Jewish National Front
far-right political party in Israel
Isratin
Isratin or Isratine (, ; , ), also known as the bi-national state (, ), is a proposed unitary, federal or confederate Israeli-Palestinian state encompassing the present territory of Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Depending on various points of view, such a scenario is presented as a desirable one-state solution resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, or as a calamity in which Israel would ostensibly lose its character as a Jewish state and the Palestinians would fail to achieve their national independence within a two-state solution. Increasingly, Isratin is being discussed not
proposed Israeli annexation of the West Bank
proposals to assume sovereignty over occupied Palestinian territory