Academic literature on the topic 'Palestinian Authors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Palestinian Authors"

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Farag, Joseph R. "Politics and Pedagogy in Palestinian Women’s Anglophone Writing." College Literature 52, no. 2 (2025): 250–75. https://doi.org/10.1353/lit.2025.a953862.

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Abstract: This paper outlines the narrative strategies and compromises deployed in three prominent anglophone novels by Palestinian women: Susan Abulhawa’s Mornings in Jenin (2010), Selma Debbagh’s Out of It (2012), and Hala Alyan’s Salt Houses (2017). In contrast to Palestinian women authors writing in Arabic, undertaking a project of internal critique of Palestinian patriarchy, these three anglophone works anticipate a western readership and, in doing so, attempt to mediate between the marginalization of Palestinian women on the one hand and the orientalist, Islamophobic, and Zionist discour
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Johnson, Penny, and Eileen Kuttab. "Where Have All the Women (and Men) Gone?" Feminist Review 69, no. 1 (2001): 21–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/014177800110070102.

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The authors ground their reflections on gender and the complex realities of the second Palestinian intifada against Israeli occupation in the political processes unleashed by the signing of the Israeli–Palestinian rule, noting that the profound inequalities between Israel and Palestine during the interim period produced inequalities among Palestinians. The apartheid logic of the Oslo period – made explicit in Israel's policies of separation, seige and confinement of the Palestinian population during the intifada and before it – is shown to shape the forms, sites and levels of resistance which
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Nassif Jassim, Hassan. "PALESTINIAN LITERATURE: A RECORD OF PERPETUAL DISPLACEMENT AND FAILURES." International journal of language, literature and culture 04, no. 04 (2024): 05–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.55640/ijllc-04-04-02.

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Within the framework of Palestine's international, political, and aesthetic contexts, this study delves into the historical evolution of Palestinian literature, serving as a testament to the people's history of suffering. terrifying trials, and being banished from their whole country. It provides context for reading Palestinian literature and learning about the writers' legacies. As authors seek new ways to play out their histories and express themselves, the study delves into significant topics, such as the British Mandatory from 1948 to 1967, the Six-Day War, and the continuing colonization.
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Ben-Youssef, Nadia, and Sandra Samaan Tamari. "Enshrining Discrimination: Israel's Nation-State Law." Journal of Palestine Studies 48, no. 1 (2018): 73–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2018.48.1.73.

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In July 2018, the Israeli Knesset passed Basic Law: Israel – The Nation-State of the Jewish People (Nation-State Law). This article highlights three of the law's central premises: the entrenched supremacy of Jewish settlers; the erasure of indigenous Palestinians; and, with reference to borders, the effective annexation of those parts of historic Palestine that were occupied in 1967. The authors reflect on the passage of the law within a broader history of settler colonialism and in the current global context of growing authoritarianism and overt institutionalized racism. The passage of such a
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Landy, David. "‘We are more than statistics and scattered body parts’: Telling stories and coalescing Palestinian history." International Sociology 28, no. 2 (2013): 145–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0268580913477951.

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The fragmentation of Palestinian lives into exile, under occupation and within Israel has led to a complex interweaving of collective memory and individual memories in the attempt to come to terms with and represent this existence. Central to Palestinian self-understanding is the key interruptive event of the Nakba, the ethnic cleansing of Palestine in 1948 which disrupted the people’s links to the land of Palestine – not only for Palestinians in exile but also for those within present-day Israel. Memorialization practices, such as those undertaken in village memorial books which record in det
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England, Samuel. "After Nostalgia: Revisiting Palestine’s Poetics of al-Andalus." Journal of Arabic Literature 55, no. 1 (2024): 3–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570064x-12341505.

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Abstract During the past thirty years, scholars of Arab cultural politics have struggled to articulate modern Palestinians’ unique ways of viewing the medieval past. Al-Andalus in particular fascinates authors and visual artists of Palestine. Our current theoretical framework within Arabic literature is poorly adapted to the sweeping historiography that these authors and artists create. This article revises the academic consensus that nostalgia is the organizing principle for Palestinian expressions of Andalusi identity. It provides a new way to understand the relationship between modern Pales
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KERIMOV, ALEXANDER, and ALFEDEYLAT FERAS. "THE STATE AND PROBLEMS OF THE MODERN PALESTINIAN POLITICAL REGIME." Sociopolitical Sciences 12, no. 5 (2022): 23–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.33693/2223-0092-2022-12-5-23-30.

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The relevance of the study is determined by the need to understand the state and problems of the political regime of the Palestinian National Authority. The Palestinian regime has recently been in a state of permanent crisis. The reasons for this crisis are the lack of State sovereignty, unresolved political, socio-economic problems of the Palestinian society, as well as the fragmentation of political forces, the lack of consensus among the local elite on the most important issues. The article examines the problems of Palestinian statehood, identifies the reasons preventing the creation of a s
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Green, Rachel. "Empathy in Post-Oslo Palestinian Literature: Reading between Identification and Recognition in Ala Hlehel’s Au Revoir Acre and Ibtisam Azem’s The Book of Disappearance." Comparative Literature 76, no. 1 (2024): 65–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00104124-10897120.

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Abstract This article considers Ala Hlehel’s Au Revoir Acre and Ibtisam Azem’s The Book of Disappearance, two Arabic-language novels published in 2014 by Palestinian authors with Israeli citizenship. It argues that both texts thematize empathy, despite its familiar pitfalls, as central to their imaginings of an inclusive political future in Israel/Palestine in the post-Oslo era. In revivifying eighteenth-century Acre and the city’s triumphant defeat of Napoleon in 1799, Hlehel’s creatively embellished historical novel curates an effortless cascade of emotionally contagious intergroup identific
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Khazanov, Anatoly, and Svetlana Gasratyan. "IRAN AND THE PALESTINIAN PROBLEM." Eastern Analytics, no. 1 (2021): 134–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.31696/2227-5568-2021-01-134-150.

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The authors describe the relations between Iran and the Palestinian movement since the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran. Israel always accused Iran of funding Palestinian terror. But though Israel accused Iran of its support for Palestinian nationalist groups the iranian leaders themselves blamed Yasser Arafat for Oslo talks with Israel. After Oslo Tehran provided with money and weapons only HAMAS and Islamic Jihad.
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Giacaman, Rita, Yoke Rabaia, and Viet Nguyen-Gillham. "Palestinian domestic violence: unwarranted political conclusions – Authors' reply." Lancet 375, no. 9722 (2010): 1253–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(10)60540-5.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Palestinian Authors"

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Ramadan, Husam [Verfasser], and Russell [Akademischer Betreuer] West-Pavlov. "Advocacy for the Palestinian Situation via Translation of Palestinian Authors into English / Husam Ramadan ; Betreuer: Russell West-Pavlov." Tübingen : Universitätsbibliothek Tübingen, 2020. http://d-nb.info/1206172916/34.

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Embaló, Birgit. "Palästinenser im arabischen Roman Syrien, Libanon, Jordanien, Palästina 1948-1988 /." Wiesbaden : Reichert, 2000. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/47694365.html.

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Mohammad, Abdel Karim. "Configuring national memory : Palestine's Mahmud Darwish and Israel's Amos Oz /." 2004. http://wwwlib.umi.com/dissertations/fullcit/3147104.

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Books on the topic "Palestinian Authors"

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Ḥannā, Abū Ḥannā. Ẓill al-ghaymah: Sīrah. al-Muʼassasah al-ʻArabīyah lil-Dirāsāt wa-al-Nashr, 2001.

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Dīk, ʻIṣām. Dalīl al-kātib al-Filasṭīnī. Ittiḥād al-Kuttāb al-Filasṭīnīyīn, 2001.

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Waḥsh, Muḥammad Jumʻah. Adīb al-ʻArabīyah Isʻāf al-Nashāshībī: Ḥayātuhu wa-fikruhu wa-adabuh. Wizārat al-Thaqāfah, 1998.

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Muʾtamar Filasṭïn al-Dawlī lil-Kuttāb (1st 1997 Jerusalem). New themes for a new era, Bir Zeit, 22-26 March 1997. al-Ittihad, 1997.

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Jabrā, Jabrā Ibrahım̄. al-Bir̓ al-ūlá: Fusūl min sır̄ah dhātıȳah. Riad El-Rayyes Books, 1987.

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Descamps-Wassif, Sara. Dictionnaire des écrivains palestiniens. Institut du monde arabe, 1999.

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Marār, Muṣṭafá. Awrāq al-ḥalawānī: Sīrah wa-masīrah dhātīyah. Muṣṭafá Marār, 2010.

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Ḥammūd, Mājidah. Jamālīyāt al-shakhṣīyah al-Filasṭīnīyah ladá Ghassān Kanafānī. Dār al-Namīr, 2005.

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Said, Edward W. Out of place: A memoir. Knopf, 1999.

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Jo, Glanville, ed. Qissat: Short stories by Palestinian women. Telegram, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Palestinian Authors"

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Agsous, Sadia. "The Making Stage of the Modern Palestinian Arabic Novel in the Experiences of the udabāʾ Khalīl Baydas (1874–1949) and Iskandar al-Khūri al-BeitJāli (1890–1973)." In European Cultural Diplomacy and Arab Christians in Palestine, 1918–1948. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-55540-5_4.

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AbstractIn 1946, the first Palestinian book fair took place at the Arab Orthodox Union Club in Jerusalem. What lay behind this event was a process that paralleled the political life revolving around the formation of local nationalism, a complex process of cultural and literary development within the Arab Nahda (‘Awakening’ or Renaissance) movement in which the Palestinians left their imprint through the press, literature, translation and other cultural fields. This chapter discusses the cultural environment of Khalīl Baydas and Iskandar al-Khūrī al-BeitJālī who initiated the modern Palestinian
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Schiocchet, Leonardo. "Palestinian Diaspora or Exile? Affective and Experiential Dimensions of (Im)mobility." In Embodied Violence and Agency in Refugee Regimes. transcript Verlag, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839458020-005.

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Many authors working on Palestinian displacement stand by the use of the term »diaspora«, and their reasoning is not easily dismissed. Yet, this chapter explains why I prefer to use the term »exile«, and why this is tied to questions about refugee regimes and refugee agency. It argues that we must problematize how even the academic discussion on refugee regimes may be embedded in, and often unintentionally may help to reinforce, mechanisms of refugee control. To achieve this goal, the chapter first considers the Palestinian global dispersal and social belonging subjectivity as a background for
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Sheehi, Lara. "16. Palestine is a Four-letter Word: Psychoanalytic Innocence and Its Malcontents." In For Palestine. Open Book Publishers, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0345.17.

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If psychoanalysis is to transform itself from a disciplinary practice of quiet (and often explicit) violence, we are asked to confront the dynamics and paradigms that objectify rather than liberate. What follows in this chapter is an account of how contemporary psychoanalysis resists, subverts, and defangs such a possible revolutionary mutation and threats of transformation. But also, more importantly and simultaneously, this chapter highlights the real-time transformation of the field by Palestinian clinicians who wilfully enact and materialize the promise of mutation, and indeed liberation,
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Marmur, Michael. "Reshit: The Flowering of Our Redemption?" In Living The Letters. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-81041-1_21.

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Abstract In 1949, the two chief rabbis of the nascent State of Israel were charged with the task of composing a prayer to give liturgical expression to this new moment in Jewish history. In keeping with the rabbinic injunction to pray for the welfare of the government, they formulated a blessing, with some help from the distinguished author S.Y. Agnon, which is still recited on Shabbat and festivals in congregations identifying with some version of Religious Zionism. The most memorable phrase in this blessing describes the State as reshit tzemichat geulatenu, the first flowering of our redempt
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Martin, Justin D., and Sherine El-Toukhy. "Blogging for Sovereignty." In Blogging in the Global Society. IGI Global, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-744-9.ch009.

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Blogs addressing political issues are often viewed as highly polarized online discussion spaces. To test the universality of this assumption, the authors evaluated 127 Palestinian blogs written in both Arabic and English languages. Blogs authored by Palestinians living in the Palestinian Territories and the State of Israel, members of the Palestinian Diaspora, and Palestinian advocates of other nationalities were analyzed in terms of the prevalence of political content, perceptions of the State of Israel, and differences in content due to language, nationality, and geographical location. Resul
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Salameh, Franck. "Israel and Palestine." In The Other Middle East. Yale University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300204445.003.0005.

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This chapter examines the works of Arab and Israeli authors who celebrate diversity, humanity, and humanism. These include Anglo-Palestinian novelist Samir el-Youssef (b. 1965), Fawaz Turki (b. 1940), and polyglot Israeli essayist Jacqueline Kahanoff (1917–79). Fawaz Turki and Samir el-Youssef, although outside the circle of those considered paragons of Palestinian literature, are exquisite—albeit contrasting—representatives of the Palestinian condition and the Palestinians' intellectual trajectories of the past fifty years. Rather than being representatives of a single state, they are mostly
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Snir, Reuven. "Bilingualism: Palestinians in Hebrew." In Palestinian and Arab-Jewish Cultures. Edinburgh University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781399503211.003.0005.

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The chapter investigates the writing in Hebrew by Palestinians through two models of the attitude to the culture of the majority. Literary bilingualism is not uncommon in societies where a minority culture evolves alongside or within a majority culture, but in Israel this minority culture has been since 1948 under constant threat from the majority culture—Arabic is not only the mother tongue of the Palestinians, it is the very embodiment of the minority’s struggle to defend and preserve its religious and cultural heritage. This explains why the phenomenon of Palestinians writing in Hebrew gene
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Mor, Liron. "Ikhtifāʾ." In Conflicts. Fordham University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9781531505431.003.0004.

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Why is the trope of disappearance (ikhtifāʾ in Arabic) so prevalent across Palestinian literature and cinema? Focusing on Palestinians in Israel, whose towns, homes, and histories were often erased or appropriated following 1948, this chapter suggests that “disappearance” offers a local theorization of Palestinian dispossession that is more accurate than dominant paradigms in the field. In the films of Elia Suleiman and the writing of Ibtisam Azem, Emile Habiby, or Sayed Kashua, disappearances embody the systemic erasure of, and blindness to, Palestinians—a mode of settler colonial dispossessi
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Mollov, Ben, and Chaim Lavie. "The Impact of Israeli-Palestinian Inter-Religious Dialogue." In Intercultural and Interfaith Dialogues for Global Peacebuilding and Stability. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7585-6.ch010.

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This chapter will focus on the prospects of inter-religious dialogue as a means of fostering the Israeli-Palestinian peacebuilding process, both from a theoretical and empirical perspectives. The two authors come from the disciplines of political science and social psychology and employ qualitative and quantitative methods, respectively. Although counter-intuitive as part of an ongoing research project, the authors suggest that, in line with other research, religion can indeed serve as a bridge between Israelis and Palestinians and not merely act as an escalatory influence as is commonly assum
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Hesse, Isabelle. "Relational Coexistence: Donations Across Divides and Imagined Kinship in Palestine/Israel." In Reimagining Israel and Palestine in Contemporary British and German Culture. Edinburgh University Press, 2024. https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781399523677.003.0006.

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This chapter considers how German authors and directors establish a ‘relational coexistence’ – a coexistence between (Israeli) Jewish and Palestinian characters that models relations between Israel and Palestine that take into account each community’s history of suffering and displacement and emphasises the relations between these histories. Werner Sonne’s novel Wenn ich dich vergesse, Jerusalem (If I Forget You, Jerusalem, 2008; translated into English as Where the Desert Meets the Sea, 2019) and Leon Geller and Marcus Vetter’s documentary Das Herz von Jenin (The Heart of Jenin, 2008) do this
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Conference papers on the topic "Palestinian Authors"

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DANILOV, V. A., and A. V. GALAKTIONOV. "THE PALESTINIAN-ISRAELI CONFLICT: PLANS OF THE TRUMP AND BIDEN ADMINISTRATIONS." In FORTUNES OF NATIONAL CULTURES IN GLOBALIZATION CONTEXT: BETWEEN TRADITION AND THE NEW REALITY. Chelyabinsk State University Publishing House, 2024. https://doi.org/10.47475/9785727120088_325.

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The authors examine the Palestinian-Israeli conflict from the point of view of two presidents of the United States of America - former Republican President Donald Trump and the current President, Representative of the Democratic Party Joseph “Joe” Biden - namely their vision of the conflict, possible ways to resolve it, as well as the benefits that they can obtain from it for their country.
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Hilmy, F. F. "The Palestinian rhetoric." In Integrated Design Research Conference 2024, edited by S. Samarawickrama. Department of Integrated Design, Faculty of Architecture, University of Moratuwa., 2024. https://doi.org/10.31705/idr.2024.7.

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The analysis begins by examining Palestine, a historically significant region in the Levant under Israeli occupation since 1948, following the Balfour Declaration—a Zionist-supported statement by the British Government advocating the establishment of a "national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine. This occupation has caused ongoing conflict, displacement, and severe restrictions on Palestinian rights. Settlement expansion, military control, and recurring violence continue to profoundly affect Palestinian communities. The escalation in Gaza on October 7, 2023, brought renewed attention to
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"Author index." In 2013 Palestinian International Conference on Information and Communication Technology (PICICT). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/picict.2013.29.

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"Author Index." In 2017 Palestinian International Conference on Information and Communication Technology (PICICT). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/picict.2017.33.

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"Author Index." In 2021 Palestinian International Conference on Information and Communication Technology (PICICT). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/picict53635.2021.00042.

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Richardson, Anthony. "PeaceMaker: Using an online educational game on Middle East politics as an ‘Object To Think With’ (OTTW) in a Masters-level Public Policy course." In Te Puna Aurei LearnFest 2022. Cardiff University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.18573/conf2.h.

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Teaching causality in complex adaptive systems to tertiary students poses dual challenges: presenting key concepts like tipping points, emergence, nonlinearity, path dependency, and feedback; and then guiding students to grasp the uncertainties these entail for policy and decision-making. While the pedagogical value of educational games is increasingly recognised, there is little consensus on underlying learning theories or game design principles. In particular, as traditional behaviourist approaches do not address the implications of complex systems, the author (teaching a Masters-level Publi
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Reports on the topic "Palestinian Authors"

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Jenkins, Brian, Bruce Butterworth, and Sachi Yagu. Evolving Patterns of Violence in Developing Countries. Mineta Transportation Institute, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.31979/mti.2024.2344.

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In August 2022, MTI issued a report entitled Changing Patterns of Violence Pose New Challenges to Public Surface Transportation in the United States. That report analyzed the frequency and lethality of attacks on public surface transport in economically advanced countries. But what has been going on in non-economically advanced countries – the vast majority of countries in the world? Using the MTI database of Terrorist and Serious Criminal Attacks Against Public Surface Transportation, the authors analyzed attacks against passenger trains and train stations, buses and bus stations and stops, a
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Sünker, Heinz. PALESTINE – ISRAEL – GERMANY History and Politics in Moving Contradictions. Association Inter-University Centre Dubrovnik, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.53099/ntkd4311.

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The relationship between the Zionist movement, which resulted in the founding of the state of Israel in 1948, and native Arabs in Palestine is conflictual and contradictory and has been so since before the current war in Gaza and Hamas’s attack on Israel. This research report brings together several texts authored by critical Israeli, Palestinian and international intellectuals. These texts analyse the historical and current relationship between Palestine, Zionism, and Israel from the last third of the 19th century onward, on the one hand, and the special involvement of Germany in this constel
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