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The concept of the Ethos of the Palestinian Struggle (hereinafter Ethos of Struggle) refers to a Palestinian perception that negates Israel's right to exist and calls for the realization of Palestinian nationalist aspirations through the establishment of a Palestinian state on all of Mandatory Palestine using diplomatic, political and military means.

The provision of the U.S. Constitution (Article I, Section 8, paragraph 3) that gives Congress the authority to regulate trade with foreign nations and among the states.

An act passed by Parliament in 1689 which limited the power of the monarch. This document established Parliament as the most powerful branch of the English government.

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A situation in which it is impossible to proceed any further.

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The term, Permanent Status Agreement, refers to an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians, which addresses, at least the following issues:

A format for Finality of Claims originating from the historic conflict such as permanent borders, settlements, Jerusalem, resolution of the refugee issue, and security arrangements;

Attainment of an End of Conflict;

End of the State of Occupation in Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) and the Gaza Strip as defined in international law; establishment of a Palestinian state; establishment of diplomatic relations between Israel and the Palestinian state.

The concept of the Principle of Historic Compromise refers to a Palestinian narrative which adopts the Two State Solution based on the partition of Mandatory Palestine. This narrative focuses on the understanding that the existence of the State of Israel is a fait accompli.

The concept of Delivery Capability refers to a political entity that – for a particular objective and context – has Carrying Capacity and/or Responsibility.

There is a distinction between an entity that possesses Delivery Capability and a Partner, in that a Partner possesses Delivery Capability and also has "Will" and Legitimacy to pursue a shared political goal.

The concept of Carrying Capacity refers to a party's ability to implement the policies it wishes to pursue in a particular context.

A government's capacity to produce or sustain policies is limited by the resources available to it. These resources can be divided into five components:

Material – Availability of human, financial or other physical resources, e.g. weapons or technology.

Building and Sustaining Coalitions – Capacity of the top executive to stay in power and forge coalitions to pass decisions and required legislation in the relevant executive and legislative bodies.

Constitutional – Capacity to constitutionally ratify executive and legislative decisions. For example, in the Palestinian case, only the PLO is constitutionally fit to reach agreements with Israel, while the Palestinian Authority is not.

Institutional – Capacity of branches of government to "get stuff done", i.e. to sustain cross-agency cooperation in planning and decision-making, as well as in the implementation of policies.

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