Palestine, media, Jordan, community radio, online journalism
following is my letter to the editor in the Daily Princetonian    Regarding ‘A bizarre and unsupported argument’ (Monday, Nov. 19, 2007):     Seffy Muller ’08 thinks it bizarre that, in his lecture, Norman Finkelstein “reduced the Palestinian Israeli conflict to the international legality and historic fact.” So if he is not supposed to talk about these rather…
my interview with Chicago’s NPR public radio regarding the Annapolis conference http://chicagopublicradio.org/content.aspx?audioID=16052
By Daoud Kuttab AMERICAN officials usually spend enormous energy highlighting the “process†in the Middle East “peace process.†Only in the last 18 months of a second term president or following a military engagement in the Middle East does the United States actually start to concern itself with “peace.â€This pattern seems to be holding true…
By Daoud Kuttab Palestinians are facing a dilemma in regards to the upcoming Annapolis Arab-Israeli peace conference, or meeting as American officials prefers to call it. The dilemma is whether to participate in yet another process that has so far produced little tangible
The government rejected a petition to grant a local radio license for the third biggest city of Jordan, Zarqa. In one of its last decision the outgoing Jordanian cabinet rejected the application by AmmanNet to set up a community radio station that will not broadcast news or politics.
Deeds and not words are the key to any argument Leslie H. Gelb fails the same test of “backing up their premise†that he sets for professors Mearsheimer & Walt. In  “Dual Loyalties,†( NY Times September 23rd Book Review of “The Israel lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy)  he denies the power of the ‘lobby’…