Skip to content
עברית
Français
Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs (JCFA)
Strategic Alliances for a Secure, Connected, and Prosperous Region
Menu
Home
About Us
About Us
Our Experts
Board of Fellows
Our Building
Programs
The JCFA Center for Security, Diplomacy, and Communications
Arab-Israel-Africa National Security Partnerships
Initiative for Palestinian Authority Accountability and Reform
Exposing Political Antisemitism and Combating Delegitimization
Black American-Israel Leadership Initiative
Institute for Contemporary Affairs
For Students and Interns
Past Programs
Defensible Borders for Israel
Jerusalem in International Diplomacy
Anti-Semitism in Canada
Publications
Authors
Major Studies
Analysis
Jerusalem Issue Briefs
Jerusalem Viewpoints
Strategic Perspectives
Global Law Forum
Special Reports
Daily Alert
Jewish Political Studies Review
Post-Holocaust and Anti-Semitism
Daniel Elazar Library
Major Knesset Debates
Israel’s Wars
Maps
Jewish Environmental Studies
Survey of Arab Affairs
Jerusalem Letter
Homeland Security Portal
Jerusalem Studies
ebooks
Other Special Features
Podcast
Videos
New Videos
YouTube
Audio Archive
Conferences
Blog
Support Us
Contact Us
Search for:
Home
Current:
Religion
Religion
God, Jews and the Media: Religion and Israel’s Media, by Yoel Cohen
December 30, 2013 |
Haim Shapiro
Several years ago, Bar Ilan University held a symposium on religion and the media. As a newspaper reporter, I was curious as to what the panelists might have to say about the moral issues occasionally faced by journalists.
Examining a Non-Centralized Religoethnic Community
October 20, 2012
American Jewry shares the long-standing American commitment to noncentralized decision-making. Decision-making in the United States is not decentralized but noncentralized. That is, there is no single center that can determine how or where decision-making should be dispersed, as the notion of decentralization implies. Rather, there are many different centers of decision-making, each of which exists legitimately in its own right, while the existence of each is protected within the society in some "constitutional" way. In political life even the federal government, powerful as it is, is simply one center ? some would even describe it as a cluster of centers ? among many.
Muslim-Jewish Interaction in the Netherlands
October 21, 2007 |
Dr. Manfred Gerstenfeld
The immigration of a large number of Muslims into the Netherlands over the past four decades has led to major challenges for the Dutch Jewish community. These include, for instance, increased verbal and physical violence against Jews and the Jewish community, the need for greater security measures, impacts on the teaching of the Holocaust in Dutch schools, and changed attitudes of the authorities and third parties toward needs of the Jewish community.
Managing Conflict: Can Religion Succeed Where Politics Has Failed? An Israeli Addresses a Global Peace Forum in Malaysia
November 1, 2006 |
Dr. Ben Mollov
Chaim I. Waxman on The Price of Whiteness: Jews, Race, and American Identity
October 1, 2006 |
Chaim I. Waxman
Anti-Zionism in Belgium – The Country’s Civil Religion that Reflects the New Anti-Semitism
February 1, 2005 |
Dr. Joel Kotek
The War of the Torah: The Israeli Religious Peace Movements’ Struggle for Legitimation
October 30, 2001 |
Gerald Cromer
AVOIDING INTERVENTION AS A MODEL FOR DE-FACTO RELIGIOUS COMPROMISE
October 30, 2000 |
Daniel Tropper
Interpretations of Jewish Tradition on Democracy, Land, and Peace
October 2, 2000 |
Prof. Gerald M. Steinberg
Religion and the Public Square: Attitudes of American Jews in Comparative Perspective – Part Two
August 1, 2000 |
Steven M. Cohen
RELIGION AND THE PUBLIC SQUARE: ATTITUDES OF AMERICAN JEWS IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE – PART ONE
July 16, 2000 |
Steven M. Cohen
Defining Limits on Religious Expression in Public Institutions: The Turkish Dilemma
October 30, 1999 |
Dr. George E. Gruen
Introduction: Religion in the Public Square: Jews Among the Nations
October 30, 1999 |
Daniel J. Elazar
Introduction: Reexamining the Issue of Religion in the Public Square
April 30, 1999
The Historic and Contemporary Relationships between Halakhah and Mishpat Hamelukhah
October 30, 1998
1
2
3
Next »