Skip to product information
1 of 1

Trouble in Utopia

Regular price £27.00
Sale price £27.00 Regular price £27.00
Sale Sold out
This book provides a thorough and detailed examination of Israeli institutions and how they function. It explains the decline in effectiveness of the government and the spread of cultural malaise i...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 19 October 1989
View Product Details

This book provides a thorough and detailed examination of Israeli institutions and how they function. It explains the decline in effectiveness of the government and the spread of cultural malaise in the Israel of the eighties. Horowitz and Lissak trace the integrative and disintegrative trends in Israel and show how a society that had laid the foundations for a cohesive Jewish nation-state became increasingly vulnerable to centrifugal forces.

The book not only reflects a broad and comprehensive approach, but also focuses on themes that cut across institutional structures, such as the weakening of social and political cohesion in an overburdened polity.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £27.00
Pages: 357
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Israeli Studies
Publication Date: 19 October 1989
ISBN: 9780791401149
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

At the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Dan Horowitz is Professor of Political Science and Sociology and Moshe Lissak is Professor of Sociology. They are co-authors of Origins of the Israeli Polity, and each has written other books.

Preface

1. Introduction: Israel as a Social Laboratory

2. Israel as a Multi-Cleavage Society

3. Ideology and Political Culture

4. Government and Politics: From a Dominant Center to a Dual Center

5. Democracy and National Security in a Protracted Conflict

6. Israel at Forty: Utopia Impaired

Appendixes

Notes

Glossary

Selected Bibliography

Index