"The Elections in Israel--2006" brings together leading Israeli
and North American social scientists and their state-of-the-art,
in-depth analysis of the 2006 Israeli national elections. The 2006
elections occurred soon after the unilateral withdrawal of Israeli
settlers and the army from the Gaza Strip and the departure of
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon from active politics due to a massive
stroke. Sharon had engineered the withdrawal from Gaza. The policy
brought about a split in his ruling Likud party, and Sharon led his
group to coalesce with other groups (including Labor's Shimon
Peres) to form a new party, Kadima. For the first time in Israeli
political history, a party of the ideological center was poised to
be the top vote getter. Kadima's victory ensured the accession of
Ehud Olmert, who became Israel's new prime minister.
Labor, too, had fielded a new leader in the person of Amir
Peretz, a former head of the country's Histadruth labor union; he
attempted to focus the campaign on social and economic issues, but
the campaign reverted back to security and foreign affairs.
Ironically, in the post-election government, Peretz was given the
post of defense minister. Likud was unable to recover from the
departure of Sharon and other leaders. Its leader.
The 2006 elections also saw a precipitous drop in voter turnout
compared to previous elections. Parties and politicians were
plagued by low levels of trust on the part of the electorate and
revelations of corruption were rife. The Arabs and the religious
Jewish parties each faced challenges in retaining their strength in
the electorate and in the governing coalition.
This volume also illuminates developments and changes in
Israeli society and politics. Many of these
developments--multiculturalism, changes in social stratification,
sinking turnout, growing mistrust of political institutions, and
political reforms--characterize other Western democracies as well,
and these are discussed from a comparative global perspective. "The
Elections in Israel--2006" will also be of particular interest to
those concerned with comparative politics and elections in
general.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!