Institute for Israeli Thought: Difference between revisions
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The [https://israelithought.co.il/about/ ''''Institute for Israeli Thought''''' ''(IIT)] was founded in 2020 by Prof. Avner Ben-Zakan and the industrialist Boaz Amitai''. Through research that focuses on structural issues in Israeli society and its dissemination to the general public, the institute seeks to shape a public discourse focused on creating a vision for a new Israel. The institute calls for public attention to be diverted towards the internal threat to the existence of the State of Israel which mainly stems from shaky and temporary governmental structures that need to be replaced with permanent and stable state structures.<ref>[https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/article-741434 "‘State institutions are reaching the point of collapse’"]</ref> |
''The [https://israelithought.co.il/about/ ''''Institute for Israeli Thought''''' ''(IIT)] was founded in 2020 by Prof. Avner Ben-Zakan and the industrialist Boaz Amitai''. Through research that focuses on structural issues in Israeli society and its dissemination to the general public, the institute seeks to shape a public discourse focused on creating a vision for a new Israel. The institute calls for public attention to be diverted towards the internal threat to the existence of the State of Israel which mainly stems from shaky and temporary governmental structures that need to be replaced with permanent and stable state structures.<ref>[https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/article-741434 "‘State institutions are reaching the point of collapse’"]</ref>'' |
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=== Objective === |
=== Objective === |
Revision as of 14:03, 17 November 2024
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. (November 2024) |
The 'Institute for Israeli Thought (IIT) was founded in 2020 by Prof. Avner Ben-Zakan and the industrialist Boaz Amitai. Through research that focuses on structural issues in Israeli society and its dissemination to the general public, the institute seeks to shape a public discourse focused on creating a vision for a new Israel. The institute calls for public attention to be diverted towards the internal threat to the existence of the State of Israel which mainly stems from shaky and temporary governmental structures that need to be replaced with permanent and stable state structures.[1]
Objective
The Institute for Israeli Thought (IIT) aims at generating Israeli thought and transforming the state from being fragmented by ethnic, national or religious identities into a more unified and inclusive Israeli civic national identity. The Institute focuses its research activity on structural reforms such as
-fixing Israel’s borders -transforming its electoral system -drafting a constitution
These structural changes are necessary as means for shifting Israel to a new political paradigm that strives to forsake temporal arrangements and establish the state on more solid foundations.
Activity
In April 2023, the IIT published an "Israeli Covenant" whose purpose is to complete the Declaration of Independence.[2] At its core is a plan for a grand structural reform that will turn Israel into a state based on a common Israeli identity, separation of religion from state, regional elections, a regional governing layer, and an Israeli civil culture.[3]
Notable Fellows
The Institute’s fellows comprise notable public intellectuals from various disciplines, covering a wide range of research and public policy interests pertinent to the challenges Israel is now facing. Alongside the Institute’s senior fellows, fellowships are available to post-doctoral fellows and doctoral candidates who devote their research to question of identity in Israel.
-Avner Ben-Zaken -Eva Illouz -Joseph Zaira -Tamar Hostovsky Brandes -Muhammad Wattad -Mordechay Cohen -Micha Popper
References
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