ONLINE: When the state of Israel was established in 1948, its founders declared that it would “be based on freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel,” ensuring “complete equality of social and political rights” and guaranteeing basic freedoms. These statements have been the basis for the ongoing commitment to keeping Israel both democratic and Jewish. Yet the balancing of these values has increasingly been challenged, culminating in the crisis of democracy facing the country in 2023. This course reviews the various approaches to Israeli democracy, and surveys the evolution of the judiciary, which has become the center of the ideological battle over the future of Israel’s democracy and provides tools for understanding the current crisis. | Lecture + Q&A.
Max enrollment: 30.
Class sessions are recorded.
Steven Klein is an educator and journalist with a Ph.D. in conflict management from Bar-Ilan University and a B.A. from Duke. An instructor at Tel Aviv University and a senior editor at Haaretz English Edition, he has contributed numerous articles on issues regarding Israeli society and social/political conflict. He has also taught for OLLI at Brandeis, the Scolnic Adult Institute and Case Western Reserve University's Siegal Lifelong Learning program. He lives with his beloved family in Israel.