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Promises in the Promised Land - Mobility and Inequality in Israel (Hardcover, New)
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Promises in the Promised Land - Mobility and Inequality in Israel (Hardcover, New)
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From its beginning as an independent state, Israel has been beset
by the divisions and tensions that characterize most ethnically
mixed societies. Kraus and Hodge investigate the process of
stratification in Israel and document what happened to Arabs as
well as to Jewish immigrants and their children in the Promised
Land by tracing not just the socioeconomic locations, but also the
proximate social determinants of the locations of significant
ethnic, cultural, gender, and religious groups. The first
extensively detailed analysis to account for status attainment in
Israel, this work contributes to a general understanding of the
status-attainment process in ethnically heterogeneous societies by
focusing on the experience of immigrants as they carved out careers
in their homeland. By generalizing the results for Israel, the
authors contend, the study illustrates processes that occurred
during periods of sustained immigration in the United States and
other ethnically and religiously heterogeneous populations for
which relevant data can no longer be collected. Many of the
research findings about Israeli society have significant
implications for social policy in Israel and elsewhere. The
investigation begins with a brief review of relevant recurring
themes in the sociological literature with particular reference to
the functional theory of stratification to provide a theoretical
background for the study--the authors' novel analyses have not been
reported elsewhere. Chapter 2 provides the social context by
presenting a picture of Israeli society and its development. The
extension of the scope of functional theory is worked out in
chapter 3 which develops a basic model of the status-attainment
process in Israeli society. Chapters 4 through 6 propose two
alternative hypotheses for ethnic stratification in Israel and test
them by examining the attainment process in the two main Jewish
ethnic groups. Chapter 7 discusses the two hypotheses by
distinguishing between Arabs and Jewish ethnic groups. In chapter 8
the attainment processes of ethnic and gender groups are examined.
Kraus and Hodge conclude with an overview of findings and places
the Israeli case in comparative perspective. Promises in the
Promised Land will be of interest to students of Israeli society
and to scholars concerned with issues of racial and ethnic
stratification, immigration, and status-attainment processes.
Informal Israel watchers of all backgrounds and persuasions as well
as policy-makers, especially those working in multiethnic societies
where national policy can impact profoundly on sociocultural
integration, will find the insights offered here of particular
value.
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