The State of Israel, The Land of Israel: The Statist and Ethnonational Dimensions of Foreign Policy
By (Author) Shmuel Sandler
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th August 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International relations
327.5694
Hardback
320
Sandler contends that the impact of the nation in foreign policy is not synonymous with that of the State. Understanding the effect of the nation is important because of the contemporary reawakening of primordial national aspirations. This study is designed to test these views by examining nation-centered concerns in foreign policy as practiced within Israel. It reviews and analyzes the roots of the territorial dimension in Israeli foreign policy since the establishment of the state up to the present; the impact of Israeli domestic politics; and the rise and fall of ethnonationalism in Israeli foreign policy. As such, the work is of concern to all students of Israeli politics and foreign policy and the Arab-Israeli conflict.
.,."a sober and welcome study."-The Jerusalem Post
.,."This is a thoughtful and considered book on the theme of statist and ethnonational ideologies and their foreign policy consequences. It is insightful as an organizing principle of Israeli foreign policy; it is also useful in understanding the contortions of rival Labor and Likud government formation efforts and especially the Labor-Likud national unity government of December 1988. Recommended for graduate collections."-Choice
...a sober and welcome study.-The Jerusalem Post
...This is a thoughtful and considered book on the theme of statist and ethnonational ideologies and their foreign policy consequences. It is insightful as an organizing principle of Israeli foreign policy; it is also useful in understanding the contortions of rival Labor and Likud government formation efforts and especially the Labor-Likud national unity government of December 1988. Recommended for graduate collections.-Choice
...a sober and welcome study.The Jerusalem Post
..."a sober and welcome study."-The Jerusalem Post
..."This is a thoughtful and considered book on the theme of statist and ethnonational ideologies and their foreign policy consequences. It is insightful as an organizing principle of Israeli foreign policy; it is also useful in understanding the contortions of rival Labor and Likud government formation efforts and especially the Labor-Likud national unity government of December 1988. Recommended for graduate collections."-Choice
SHMUEL SANDLER is Senior Lecturer, Department of Political Science, Bar-Ilan University in Israel and a Fellow at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. Among his earlier publications are Israel, the Palestinians and the West Bank and Israel's Odd Couple.