This article examines two instances where thousands of foreigners - predominantly, though not exclusively, Jews - offered their services to the Israeli state in the context of a military conflict. It assesses wartime encounters between the volunteers and their Israeli hosts in 1948 and 1967. After each of these conflicts, the state sought to incorporate as many foreign volunteers as possible into Israeli society. However, the majority of the volunteers saw their mobilisation as temporary and chose to return to their countries of origin. Furthermore, they expected the Israelis to do more to acknowledge their contribution. Yet, as the article shows, official recognition emerged gradually over the course of several decades
A timely study by two well-known scholars offers a theoretically informed account of the political s...
The process by which the State of Israel assimilates new Jewish migrants, referred to in Hebrew as o...
Between 1933 and 1939 many British organisations, as well as individuals, who witnessed the rise of ...
This article examines two instances where thousands of foreigners - predominantly, though not exclus...
The literature on foreign, or "transnational," war volunteering has focused overwhelmingly on the mo...
This article offers a different perspective on Soviet Jewish emigration, and some of the concerns to...
Beginning in 1967 the Soviet Union allowed some Jewish citizens to leave for family reunification in...
During the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) around 35000 volunteers from many countries fought in the s...
This article shows that organised youth mobility programmes from West Germany to Israel in the late ...
Using second-generation Israeli migrants in the United States as a case study, this article explores...
Volunteering in government institutions by national minorities in conflict with the state raises fas...
This study examines the relationship between international migration flows and security of states. S...
After World War 11, Israel and Germany adopted curiously similar policies of ethnic immigration, acc...
The current research examines the relationship between the Israeli state and its migrant community i...
Summary. The article explores and contextualises the arrival of Jewish psychiatrists from Germany an...
A timely study by two well-known scholars offers a theoretically informed account of the political s...
The process by which the State of Israel assimilates new Jewish migrants, referred to in Hebrew as o...
Between 1933 and 1939 many British organisations, as well as individuals, who witnessed the rise of ...
This article examines two instances where thousands of foreigners - predominantly, though not exclus...
The literature on foreign, or "transnational," war volunteering has focused overwhelmingly on the mo...
This article offers a different perspective on Soviet Jewish emigration, and some of the concerns to...
Beginning in 1967 the Soviet Union allowed some Jewish citizens to leave for family reunification in...
During the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) around 35000 volunteers from many countries fought in the s...
This article shows that organised youth mobility programmes from West Germany to Israel in the late ...
Using second-generation Israeli migrants in the United States as a case study, this article explores...
Volunteering in government institutions by national minorities in conflict with the state raises fas...
This study examines the relationship between international migration flows and security of states. S...
After World War 11, Israel and Germany adopted curiously similar policies of ethnic immigration, acc...
The current research examines the relationship between the Israeli state and its migrant community i...
Summary. The article explores and contextualises the arrival of Jewish psychiatrists from Germany an...
A timely study by two well-known scholars offers a theoretically informed account of the political s...
The process by which the State of Israel assimilates new Jewish migrants, referred to in Hebrew as o...
Between 1933 and 1939 many British organisations, as well as individuals, who witnessed the rise of ...