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ARAB MINORITY IN ISRAEL (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   093902


Arab Israeli citizens in the 2009 elections: between Israeli citizenship and Palestinian Arab identity / Koren, David   Journal Article
Koren, David Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The 18th Knesset currently seats 13 Arab and Druze MKs. This is one MK fewer compared to the corresponding figure in the 17th Knesset and the number of MKs representingpredominantly Arab parties hardly changed (increasing from 10 to 11). These minor changes are surprising considering the formative nature of the events in the Jewish-Arab arena during the three years since the last elections. The article suggests that the same events which intensified the Arab desire to separate from the Jewish majority - The Israeli operation in Gaza during December 2008-January 2009 ("Cast Lead") and the "Israel Beytenu" party's campaign which has placed the issue of Israeli Arabs' loyalty to their state at the top of its agenda - were the ones who motivated the Arabs to participate eventually in the elections to allay outcomes they perceived as deleterious to their interests.
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2
ID:   192246


Arab Lecturer on a Zionist Campus: Student Practices Replicating National Hegemony / Mahajne, Ibrahim; Allassad Alhuzail, Nuzha   Journal Article
Mahajne, Ibrahim Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Minority groups tend to experience the academic campus as unpleasant and excluding. Relevant literature attempts to analyze the position of these groups, using terms such as ‘race’ and investigating how higher education institution mechanisms replicate the inequality between the minority group and the hegemonic majority population. In Israel, unresolved problems cause continuing tension between two national groups: citizens who are members of the Palestinian Arab minority (PAMI) and citizens from the Jewish majority. This article focuses on relations between PAMI and Jews on Israeli campuses by drawing upon insights from American research, but it replaces the term ‘race’ with ‘nationality.’ Academe is the only place in Israel where the Arab lecturer is in a position of power vis-à-vis the Jewish student. The study presents this encounter from the viewpoint of the lecturer, drawing on data from interviews with 56 PAMI lecturers in public and private Israeli universities and colleges. The findings indicate that Jewish students use various strategies to divest Arab lecturers of their elevated status in academe.
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