Israel
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Report (20)
- Book (17)
- Working Paper (6)
- Article (5)
- Part of Periodical (3)
- Other (2)
- Part of a Book (1)
- Conference Proceeding (1)
- Lecture (1)
- Periodical (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (58)
Keywords
- Jihad (2)
- Terrorism (2)
- Aliya (1)
- Anti-Americanism ; Shiite messianism ; Islamism (1)
- Betar (1)
- Bnei Akiva (1)
- British Rule in Palestine (1)
- Courmayeur <2000> (1)
- Exodus (1)
- Finanzierung (1)
Institute
- Extern (1)
This paper examines the political-economy and cultural dynamics and discourses underlying the emergence of the Palestinian Hamas and the Algerian Islamic Salvation Front. Both movements emerged in the late 1980s as responses to continuing (neo) colonial conditions in their countries. I explore to what extent the various processes commonly referred to as “globalization,” both the world-wide economic transformations epitomized by post-fordism on the macro/system level and neo-liberal structural adjustment programs within countries, and—perhaps more important—its cultural dynamics contributed to the rise and power of both movements. I examine the socio-economic situation in Algeria and Palestine-Israel during the 1980s and link it to the politics developments in both countries. Next I review the events behind the founding of both movements and the main components of their ideologies and strategies. Finally I explore their arguments to determine whether the political-economic or cultural pressures unleashed by globalization were the determining factor in their emergence and ideological development. I conclude by comparing the two case studies to determine if there are common threads that can serve as the basis for a region-wide investigation of the role of globalization in the emergence and/or rise to social hegemony of Islamist movements in other MENA countries.
Mark Kopytman - Voices of Memories: Essays and Dialogues, ed. Yulia Kreinin, Israel Music Institute, Tel Aviv, 2004, 288 p. A Doctor of Medicine who is also a composer is a rarity. A composer who is also a Doctor of Medicine is even rarer. Dr. Med. Mark Kopytman, however, is above all a composer, and one of Israel´s foremost contemporary composers at that. "Mark Kopytman - Voices of Memories" is a Festschrift - a volume of collected essays edited by Yulia Kreinin, to celebrate his 70th birthday. It is a formidable literary monument to honour this outstanding personality.
Agro-technology
(2001)