Realising Palestinian Self-Determination and State Sovereignty: What next?

Call for conference papers

Call for papers for an international conference to discuss roles, responsibilities and priorities, particularly international solidarity, in realising Palestinian self-determination and statehood, from scholarly, civil society and political perspectives.

Man flying Palestinian flag in front of ICC in The Hague
The Tahrir Institute

Hosted by the International Institute of Social Studies in The Hague, the conference will reflect on the prospects of Palestinian self-determination and Palestinian State sovereignty. It aims to draw multiple perspectives from academics, civil society representatives, and experts who are closely following geo-political developments.

The call

Abstracts are invited from academics, diplomats and civil society actors on one of the conference themes:

The magnitude of Israeli crimes that have been perpetrated upon the Palestinian people would not have been possible without decades of inaction and normalization of relations with the State of Israel, which have fostered an environment of impunity. This is despite clear international obligations on the part of Third States and outside entities. 

While Hamas as a governmental entity has been subject to extensive restrictions, there has been hardly any attempt to hold Israel (as a State) accountable to its obligations, as laid out in three Advisory Opinions of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the Provisional Measures of the ICJ in a case brought by South Africa against Israel on charges of genocide. Moreover, despite the issuing of arrest warrants by the International Criminal Court and a few isolated charges against individuals accountable for international crimes, individual impunity, on which international criminal law is premised, remains a key challenge. 

We will also explore whether international interventions, from the Oslo Process to the Trump Plan, create pathways toward ending Israel’s control over Gaza, or whether they risk entrenching new forms of external oversight that undermine the independence of Palestinian decision-making. By situating the resolution within the broader historical context of these externally imposed frameworks, we explore how international governance mechanisms align with, challenge, or explicitly undermine the Palestinian national project.

There has been unyielding resilience and resistance on the part of the Palestinian people, especially in Gaza. Medical professionals, academics, teachers and farmers have all played especially critical roles. This has been in the face of unrelenting assaults on the human, physical, and social fabric of Palestinian society. 

With land at the core of the Israeli settler-colonial enterprise, the role of farmers in remaining on their land has assumed a particular, core function in resisting the advance of Israeli colonization.

More broadly, the creation of political and social spaces at local and international levels, to discuss the harms, repair, justice, leadership, and healing enables a critical process of legal and political recognition, rehumanization, and repair for Palestinian people, both at home and abroad.

The Netherlands has seen three massive demonstrations of hundreds of thousands of people, weekly civil servant protests and regular disruptions directed against Israel’s genocide and bombardment of the Gaza Strip. The momentum and scale of mobilization in the Netherlands and indeed the broader international community have been unprecedented in modern times. 

However, with talks of a ‘ceasefire’, there are concerns that this solidarity will begin to dissipate as the underlying calls for Palestinian self-determination and sovereignty become subsumed by other issues, while remaining totally unresolved. 

Further, over the past decade, and with unprecedented intensity since the genocide in Gaza, digital spaces have become central platforms for Palestinian resistance, narrative production and global advocacy. Social media platforms, digital archiving initiatives, open-source investigations and community-based campaigns have reshaped global understanding of the Palestinian struggle in ways that traditional media outlets and diplomatic channels have long failed to achieve. 

Yet these developments are unfolding within a landscape marked by algorithmic suppression, coordinated disinformation campaigns, censorship of Palestinian voices, and the increasing weaponization of digital platforms by state and non-state actors. 

Organized around these 3 broad themes, this conference will provide an opportunity for relevant and thoughtful conversations from political-diplomatic, scholarly, and civil society perspectives about the role of and possible pathways forward for international solidarity and Palestinian self-determination.

Important dates

  • 15 January 2026 - Deadline for submission of abstracts
  • 26 January 2026 - The authors of abstracts selected for inclusion in the conference are invited to submit a draft policy or academic paper of not more than 6,000 words
  • 13 February 2026 - Date of conference - more details about the conference will be available on this website shortly

The conference will be held in English. There may be some opportunity for Arabic-language presentations. 

Organizers

This conference is co-sponsored by Birzeit University, Palestine, and the Legal Mobilization Platform at the International Institute of Social Studies.

More information

All correspondence and inquiries should be addressed to the Conference Committee via the following address: LMP@iss.nl 

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