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BEERSHEBA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   157404


Back to the land: a new generation of activists is raising the global profile of Indigenous Arab Bedouins and resisting Israeli government efforts to seize their territories / Nasasra, Mansour   Journal Article
Nasasra, Mansour Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The Indigenous Arab Bedouin have lived in southern Palestine for centuries, mainly in the city of Beersheba, known as Bir al-Saba’ in Arabic. The community preserved its traditional Islamic culture under Ottoman and British rule, and has continued to do so under the sedentarization polices of the Israeli state. Various regimes have come and gone in the Naqab, a region that today accounts for more than half of Israel’s landmass, but the Bedouin have remained loyal to their ancestral lands.
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2
ID:   143625


University, community, identity: Ben-Gurion University and the city of Beersheba - a political cultural analysis / Dahan, Yitzhak   Article
Dahan, Yitzhak Article
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Summary/Abstract The political‒cultural paradigm has become a common theoretical framework during recent decades. Scholars use it in diverse disciplines, such as urban sociology and urban politics. This article introduces that framework into the realm of public policy within the context of the university‒community relationship. The well-known university‒community debate follows the question: to what extent should an urban university be involved and engaged in community life? The article examines the case of Ben-Gurion University and the city of Beersheba during 1970‒2012. The findings show that the local university aimed to advance its urban community and to act on behalf of community interests, but the community did not always view this involvement positively, often criticizing it. An analysis using the political‒cultural paradigm finds cultural differences between university and community which result from a long history of conflict and from different collective memories.
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