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In the modern age, post-Holocaust studies should embrace the
variety of media and cultural channels available to enable the
comprehension of the current population. When implementing these
channels, individuals have to take into account a holistic approach
to ensure all aspects of this area are integrated to ensure an
inclusive understanding of the Holocaust. Post-Holocaust Studies in
a Modern Context is a critical scholarly resource that explores the
impact of post-Holocaust issues on current social issues across the
globe such as the Western approach to immigration and the shaping
and reshaping of national ethos across the globe. Featuring a wide
range of topics such as millennials, cultural heritage, artistry,
educational programs, and historical experience, this book is a
vital resource for students, professors, researchers, and readers
of popular social science interested in the fate of the Jewish
people and the sociological forces that influence the post-WWII
era.
The major goal of this study is to uncover which social variables
are capable of encouraging or discouraging patriotism. In other
words, it aims to locate the basics of the social machinery that
motivates individuals to set aside their personal well being and
sacrifice their resources for the sake of the common good. However,
this research also examines the social predictors of patriotism
through a quest for the hierarchy of their importance. Following a
thorough assessment of each variable, given that in real life none
of them act in isolation, the great question is which social factor
is dominant and which might practically be counted as
ineffective.The book establishes an integrative overview of a
relatively understudied social phenomenon. Patriotism has been
examined and related to in bibliographical sources to which this
study refers; however, this book enables a large overview of the
different approaches and integrates a cohesive approach.In addition
to the theoretical discussion, the presentation and analyses of
empirical date enable a practical evaluation of the concepts that
have been developed. Data from large-scale surveys data, together
with in-depth interviews, enable a rare opportunity to confirm or
to invalidate some existing theories, in particular those focusing
on the social conditions for patriotism.All in all, then, this
research provides a systematic inquiry of patriotism and its social
and political causes. Yet beyond the conclusions stemming from its
numerous quantitative and qualitative data, it also presents a
holistic point of view and manages to put together the pieces that
form one of the most unique social phenomena.Among other findings,
the book presents research that invalidates a theoretical concept
according to which patriotism is closer to conservatism than to
liberalism. Whereas surveys and polls show a tendency of right-wing
politicians to be more patriotic than leftists, this book has gone
the extra mile of statistically analyzing the data in a
multivariate regression; that is, examining how political attitudes
affect patriotism in reality, once all the factors act together.
This statistical analysis shows clearly how in practice political
attitude is very loosely connected to patriotism. In addition to
that, the patriotic conservative in-depth interviewees of this
study have been inspired to love their country by their political
ideologies just like the patriotic liberal interviewees. This
finding thus reinforces how the accusations of one political party
against another for not being patriotic should be taken with more
than a grain of salt.The book will be of interest to specialists
and students in the field of the social and political sciences,
especially those whose research focus on social behavior in
political contexts.
Throughout history, as well as in contemporary times, religion has
had a significant impact on society and culture. Many times
religious undertones are incorporated into political agendas or
social movements in an effort to spur action from and engage the
masses Comparative Perspectives on Civil Religion, Nationalism, and
Political Influence investigates how belief systems, political
behavior, and public action impact the general populace. Featuring
theoretical concepts and empirical research across pertinent topic
areas, this book is a pivotal reference source for students,
scholars, and public figures interested in social behavior,
religious studies, and politics.
The 1973 Yom Kippur War did not only have external implications on
Israel, but also some dramatic internal implications, particularly
with regards to the civil-military relations as well as the fields
of psychology and political sociology. To this day, the
consequences of this war are still prevalent in Israel, in terms of
drafting security policies and the military doctrine. After the
war, new identities were formed in the Israeli civil society, which
began to function as active agents in shaping security policy.
These players are not a unique Israeli case, yet their actions in
Israel serve as a case study that illuminates their significant
impact in other countries as well. This is due to the fact that the
"Israeli Laboratory" is a liberal democratic society living with an
ongoing conflict; it has a mandatory army that is sensitive to
fluctuations in public opinion, culture and the media; and issues
of national security and military conduct are always a top public
concern. Consequently, this book examines the rise of five
identities and agents that were formed after the 1973 War and
highlights the effects they had on the formation of Israeli defense
policy from then on. The book also clarifies the importance of
exposure to these agents' activities, referring to the
psycho-political social factors that may actually dictate a state's
international policies. It therefore forms a study that connects
sociology, political psychology, international relations, the field
of culture studies and studies of strategy planning. Thus, the book
is of interest to both the domestic-Israeli field of research and
to the global scholarly discourse, particularly to academic
disciplines engaged in civil-military relations (political
sociology, political science).
The question of whether Israel is capable of coping with long-term
warfare has long haunted scholars of Israel studies. This book
tackles the question through a thorough analysis of the Israeli
national ethos. The national ethos of a people is the integrating
element that defines a nation's identity and bonds it into a
coherent social group. However, in the Israeli case, two competing
forms of national ethos threaten to tear society apart and weaken
it: a republican ethos that cherishes the national group and a
liberal ethos that puts the individual above all. In creating an
account of Israel's ability to fight possible future wars, this
book carefully examines these two competing forms of national ethos
that create an ideological dichotomy in Israel. Each ethos has its
reasoning, its inherent logic, its historic origins, and theories
of social science that can explain the background for its
development. This book offers a comprehensive analysis of each
ethos that takes account of the environment, setting, and
circumstances through which it ought to be understood. The deep
inquiry into the dynamics of Israel's national ethos enables a new
comprehension of the wobbliness of Israeli politics, and leads to
certain conclusions about the fatal question that this book set out
to find-whether Israel will eventually survive its international
struggles or perish.
In political science, war is generally considered the most
traumatic event a nation faces, often posing threats to a nation's
very existence. The challenge of surviving the war may, therefore,
prove central to the life of a nation. However, national resilience
during war has not yet been fully investigated. National Resilience
during War: Refining the Decision-Making Model, by Eyal Lewin,
searches for the mechanisms of national resilience through a deep
inquiry into nine different case studies taken from the scenery of
World War II. Following a multi-disciplinary attitude, a business
management model is adopted (the PEST and SWOT model) and
political, economic, social, and military-technological factors are
analyzed for each of the case studies. The result is a
comprehensive political decision-making model on a national level
that can serve as a means for leaders to navigate successfully in
geopolitical turbulence as well as for social scientists to better
understand the defeats that different countries suffer and the
victories that others demonstrate. This research, however, goes
further by refining the model and pointing to the exact combination
of factors that are crucial for a nation's ability to win its wars.
Using a qualitative comparative analysis technique, the exact
combination is traced. The results emphasize that the winning
scheme blends political and social factors together: leadership,
positive psychology and an inspiring national ethos prove to be a
necessary, though not a sufficient, conditional combination for
success. National Resilience during War fills a significant gap in
the literature on the politics of war.
In the modern age, post-Holocaust studies should embrace the
variety of media and cultural channels available to enable the
comprehension of the current population. When implementing these
channels, individuals have to take into account a holistic approach
to ensure all aspects of this area are integrated to ensure an
inclusive understanding of the Holocaust. Post-Holocaust Studies in
a Modern Context is a critical scholarly resource that explores the
impact of post-Holocaust issues on current social issues across the
globe such as the Western approach to immigration and the shaping
and reshaping of national ethos across the globe. Featuring a wide
range of topics such as millennials, cultural heritage, artistry,
educational programs, and historical experience, this book is a
vital resource for students, professors, researchers, and readers
of popular social science interested in the fate of the Jewish
people and the sociological forces that influence the post-WWII
era.
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