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JAMAL, AMAL
(4)
answer(s).
Srl
Item
1
ID:
057920
Ambiguities of minority patriotism: lover for homeland versus s
/ Jamal, Amal
Autumn 2004
Jamal, Amal
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
Autumn 2004.
Key Words
Palestine
;
Self-determination
;
Minorities
;
Israel
;
Ethno-Nationalism
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2
ID:
069023
Arab leadership in Israel: ascedance and fragmentation
/ Jamal, Amal
Jamal, Amal
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Publication
2006.
Key Words
Israel
;
Leadership
;
Arab Politics
;
Arab-Israel Leadership
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3
ID:
145606
Constitutionalizing sophisticated racism: Israel’s proposed nationality law
/ Jamal, Amal
Jamal, Amal
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
This essay analyzes the political motivations behind the Jewish Nation-State Bill introduced in the Knesset in November 2014, shedding light on the ascendancy of the Israeli political establishment’s radical right wing. It argues that there were both internal and external factors at work and that it is only by examining these thoroughly that the magnitude of the racist agenda currently being promoted can be grasped. The essay also discusses the proposed legislation’s long history and the implications of this effort to constitutionalize what amounts to majoritarian despotism in present-day Israel.
Key Words
Sophisticated Racism
;
Israel’s Proposed Nationality Law
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4
ID:
185160
Theorizing state stigmatization: a comparative perspective on South Africa and Israel
/ Hatuel-Radoshitzky, Michal ; Jamal, Amal
Jamal, Amal
Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract
This article deals with state stigmas in the international arena, and addresses the question: why do state-stigmas develop and become sustained in some cases, whereas in other cases they wither away? For parsimonious, analytical purposes we view the process of state stigmatisation through two, interrelated stages: the stigma’s development – where transnational civil society activists and the engagement of mainstream international media play an important role; and the stigma’s sustenance where these elements are joined by the target state’s coping strategy. For theoretical consistency, we limit ourselves to exploring states that are (a) involved in conflicts and (b) aspiring to be part of the Western-led ‘club’ of states. Through the analysis of press articles and UN documents relating to two vastly different case studies: South Africa (1985–1994) and Israel (2000–2019), we demonstrate that states in conflictual situations have limited manoeuvring space in dealing with their developing stigmas; and that the choice of tools utilized in the implementation of the same coping strategy can lead to different results.
Key Words
Civil Society
;
Israel
;
South Africa
;
Soft Power
;
English School
;
State Stigma
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