Timeline – Context at a Glance
Key turning points in Palestine/Israel history, with links to primary sources. Where abbreviations first appear, we define them for clarity.
British Mandate period and partition proposals
From the end of WWI through the British Mandate. 1917 Balfour Declaration; 1947 UN Partition Plan proposes separate Arab/Jewish states with special status for Jerusalem.
Learn moreInterwar debates over self-determination and minority protections shaped the Mandate system. Partition concepts evolved alongside immigration quotas, land regulation, and communal violence. By 1947, the UN Special Committee recommended a two-state plan with an internationalized Jerusalem, reflecting security and sovereignty claims that persisted into later diplomacy.
War / Nakba; refugee crisis
Conflict around the end of the Mandate leads to mass displacement. The UN establishes the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) for Palestine refugees; armistice lines are set in 1949.
Learn moreDisplacement patterns, property/absentee laws, and armistice demarcations continued to define claims over return, restitution, and status. Refugee relief transitioned from emergency assistance to protracted-crisis services (education, health, social protection), leaving core political questions unresolved.
Six-Day War; occupation begins
Israel occupies the West Bank (including East Jerusalem), Gaza Strip, Golan Heights, and Sinai (later returned to Egypt). International focus centers on territory, settlements, and security.
Learn morePost-1967 administration produced layered legal regimes, settlement expansion, and security infrastructures. Debates over applicability of international humanitarian law hinged on occupation status, protected persons, and the legal weight of Security Council resolutions—framing later advisory opinions and diplomatic initiatives.
Oslo period, PA creation; Gaza disengagement
Interim agreements create the Palestinian Authority and phased arrangements; the period includes closures and the Second Intifada. In 2005 Israel withdraws settlements/military from Gaza (disengagement).
Learn moreOslo introduced phased security and civil arrangements (Areas A/B/C) without resolving final-status issues. Violence and political shifts narrowed public confidence. Disengagement removed settlements from Gaza but left core jurisdictional, border, and access questions contested.
Gaza blockade; recurring escalations
Restrictions on movement/access around Gaza and repeated hostilities drive severe humanitarian needs tracked by UN agencies and NGOs.
Learn moreAssessment reports describe long-term impacts on public health, infrastructure, economy, and protection concerns. Fuel shortages, damaged utilities, and access denials complicate medical referral systems and essential services, entrenching a cycle of emergency response over durable recovery.
Major escalation; legal & humanitarian tracks
Large-scale hostilities, mass displacement, and aid-access crises. Proceedings include International Court of Justice (ICJ) provisional-measures orders (state responsibility) and the International Criminal Court (ICC) investigation (individual criminal responsibility), alongside UN emergency responses.
Learn moreProvisional measures address risk of irreparable harm and bind the parties pending judgment, while ICC actions focus on individual liability for alleged core crimes. UN and NGO reporting emphasizes protection of civilians, humanitarian access, and accountability under international law.
Key Facts
Readable, source-linked points to ground conversation. Pair these with the timeline and with primary documents whenever possible.
International Law: Civilian Protection & Accountability
International humanitarian law (“IHL”) requires distinction, proportionality, and precautions in attack. International human-rights law (“IHRL”) also applies. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) addresses state responsibility (including binding provisional measures), while the International Criminal Court (ICC) investigates individual criminal responsibility (war crimes, crimes against humanity, etc.). Protection of civilians and facilitation of rapid, unimpeded humanitarian relief are core obligations.
Humanitarian Situation & Access
UN agencies and NGOs consistently highlight constraints that worsen civilian harm: secure and sustained access for aid convoys, fuel and medical-supply shortages, damage to hospitals/water/electricity, and risks to humanitarian staff. OCHA coordinates access and tracks needs; WHO, UNICEF, and UNRWA document public-health, nutrition, WASH, and displacement impacts.
Occupation, Settlements & International Positions
The status of the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) and Gaza has been framed by UN Security Council resolutions and advisory opinions. Most states and major legal bodies regard settlement activity in the occupied West Bank as contrary to international law (see UNSC 242, 2334).
What Relief Groups Report
Major humanitarian organizations routinely cite insecurity, bombardment, access denials, and damaged logistics as the main obstacles to delivering aid. Neutral, impartial humanitarian relief is protected under IHL and should not be impeded.
Canada’s Role: Exports, Treaties & Consistency
Canada is party to the Arms Trade Treaty and screens controlled exports to avoid clear risks of serious violations of IHL or IHRL. Constituents can ask for transparent risk assessments and alignment between policy and practice.
Speech, Protest & Community Safety (Canada)
Peaceful assembly is protected. Communities can firmly oppose all forms of racism—including antisemitism and Islamophobia—while advocating for civilian protection, humanitarian access, and accountability. Keep entrances clear, follow police direction on safety, and document any harassment.
