Abstract
In the midst of an ongoing debate over the adoption of group specific definitions of racism and
prejudice in UK universities, scholars of Palestine, Israel, and related fields find themselves
implicated in a politicized discourse about contemporary antisemitism that has narrowed the
space for robust and open discussion over history and lived reality in the Middle East. Drawing
on recent experience at UCL, where the Academic Board has studied the IHRA definition and
voted to replace it with an alternative more fit for purpose in a university setting, as well as the
drafting and release of the Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism (JDA), I will explore the
challenges and opportunities for cross-communal solidarity and mutual understanding of the
lived experience of discrimination that have emerged from a protracted battle over definitions.
At the same time, I will explore what has been lost in this argument: how have the contours of
contemporary definitions been shaped by a problematic linkage between antisemitism and the
struggle for Palestinian rights? What might this imply about the uncoupling of national ideology
and Jewish identity in the 21 st century? How might Palestine serve as both a rupture and means
of repair?
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