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Recent nation-wide surveys of the Jews of France yielded a detailed
picture of this community, one of the largest Jewish Diaspora
populations, with a long and rich history. This book presents
results and analyses of this survey for the first time in English.
Key issues explored include demographics, representations of Jewish
identity, expressions of community solidarity, social issues, and
values. Data was analyzed using multi-dimensional techniques,
revealing underlying structural relationships and an axiological
typology. The translation of the French edition was expanded for
accessibility to an English-speaking audience, including a
background on history, socio-political climate and related
philosophical works. The cumulative result is the most up-to-date
and comprehensive look at the Jews of France at the turn of the
third millennium. "...the empirical centerpiece of Cohen's study is
sound, invaluable, and often highly illuminating. In the short
space provided this reviewer could not fully do justice to the
wealth of information presented there..." Ethan Katz, University of
Cincinnati
The books in this series are intended to systematically and
cumulatively contribute to the formation, embodiment, and
advancement of knowledge in the field of tourism. The series
multidisciplinary framework and treatment of tourism includes
application of theoretical, methodological, and substantive
contributions from such fields as anthropology, business
administration, ecology, economics, geography, history,
hospitality, leisure, planning, political science, psychology,
recreation, religion, sociology, transportation, etc., but it
significantly favours state-of-the-art presentations, works
featuring new directions, and especially the cross-fertilization of
perspectives beyond each of these singular fields. "The TSS" series
aspires to assure each theme achieves a comprehensiveness possible
only in book-length academic treatment. Each volume in the series
is intended to deal with a particular aspect of this increasingly
important subject, thus to play a definitive role in enlarging and
strengthening the foundation of knowledge in the field of tourism,
and consequently to expand its frontiers into the new research and
scholarship horizons ahead.
This book is a cumulative analysis of an international,
longitudinal study of a tour program which brings Jewish youth from
around the world to Israel. It is a case study of the longest
running and most thoroughly documented, intentionally organized
heritage tour program in existence, including a wealth of data
never previously published. Issues central to Jewish studies are
explored in depth, including cross-cultural analysis of the impact
and meaning of the program in Jewish communities around the world.
Additionally, it touches on core issues related to identity in the
post-modern era, the sociology of contemporary tourism, and
informal education and adolescent psychology and sociology. The
book is relevant to researchers, professionals and university
students in the fields of Jewish studies and tourism.
This pedagogical and sociological analysis of Shoah (Holocaust)
education in Israeli state schools is based on an empirical survey
conducted in 2007-2009 among junior high school and high school
students, teachers, principals in general and religious schools,
and experts in the field. It explores issues such as materials and
methods, beliefs and attitudes, messages imparted, pedagogical
challenges, and implications for national and religious identity
and universal values. Comparative and multi-dimensional analyses of
sub-populations, such as by age and type of school, were conducted.
The practical and theoretical implications of the findings are
considered in the context of Shoah education in Israel and other
educational settings over the past half century.
This volume brings together Cohen's principle articles on the
sociology of tourism, published over the last three decades. Part
one collects his major theoretical papers, starting with the
pioneering articles of the 1970's, which contributed to the opening
of the field of tourism for social science research, up to the
recent work on the ongoing process of change in contemporary
tourism. Part two features the author's work on the many-sided
interfaces between tourism and other domains - such as religion,
crime and language. Part three includes several case studies,
representative of diverse aspects of the author's empirical
research. The introduction places the author's work in the context
of the development of the field, while the concluding chapter
outlines the challenges that future developments in tourism will
pose to its study.
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