As fighting between Israel and Hamas continues, what will happen after the war ends? The so-called two state solution has long been one of the most prominent ideas, where independent states of Israel and Palestine exist side-by-side, but previous attempts to solidify an agreement have fallen short. We’ll talk with members of A Land For All, a group of Palestinian and Israeli leaders, activists and scholars who have a new political vision of how to live together with “pragmatic and viable solutions to the obstacles that have stymied prior negotiations, moving us from a paradigm of separation towards a future based on power sharing and shared interests.” We’ll talk about their vision for a road to peace and an intertwined future.
Guests:
Omar Dajani, professor of law, University of the Pacific's McGeorge School of Law; board member, "A Land For All"; former senior legal advisor, Palestine Liberation Organization's Negotiations Support Unit
May Pundak, co-leader and executive director, the Israeli branch of “A Land for All”
Rula Hardal, lecturer, Arab-American University; research fellow, the Shalom Hartman Institute; co-leader, "A Land For All"
How Safe Are Our Bay Area Waterways?
Controlled Access to Methadone Fuels ‘The War on Recovery’ in California
Why Do Animals Like to Play?
KQED's 'On Our Watch' Uncovers Corruption and Abuse at California’s New Folsom Prison
California Fast Food Workers Get Minimum Wage Increase
'The Alternative' Describes More Ethical Economic Practices
What’s Your Favorite Flavor?
'Jazz Hero' Jesse 'Chuy' Varela on the History of Latin Jazz in the Bay Area and Beyond
How to Climb Mt. Everest Sustainably and Ethically
DOJ Targets Apple in Latest Anti-Monopoly Action against Big Tech
Accelerating Climate Change to Force Mass U.S. Migration
Graphic Novelist Raina Telgemeier Taps into Adolescent Anxiety, Zeitgeist
Love in the Digital Age: Navigating the Pitfalls of Modern Romance
What Will the Realtors’ Settlement Mean for the Bay Area Housing Market?
Beth Linker’s Book ‘Slouch’ Recounts History of ‘Posture Panic’
'Who’s Afraid of Gender?' According to Judith Butler, Nearly Everyone.
Don’t Call It a ‘Superbloom,’ But CA’s Blooms This Year Sure Seem Super
SFMOMA Chiura Obata Exhibit Captures “Grand Nature” of California
Why More Boys Are Developing Eating Disorders
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Stories Teachers Share Archives - KQED Mindshift
Bay Curious
MindShift Podcast
Truth Be Told Presents: She Has A Name
KQED’s The California Report