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Original Articles

Local autonomy and immigration: Mayoral policy-making in peripheral towns in Israel

Pages 167-184 | Received 01 Jul 2004, Published online: 19 Aug 2006
 

Abstract

The paper examines the discretionary powers of Israeli local mayors in small peripheral towns under conditions of changing patterns of decentralisation and attempts to ascertain the contribution of national ideology, social structure and financial constraints in understanding the limits to these powers. Research on immigration policy-making generally focuses on the role of the state and of its institutions. Recently, as part of an underlying trend towards greater decentralisation, a new direction in immigration policy study is emerging, emphasising the power of local authorities in decision-making in Israel and elsewhere. However, it is usually considered separately from national ideologies or policies at the state level. Research into how mayors of small Israeli peripheral towns (development towns) responded to the settlement of a large wave of immigration from the former Soviet Union during the 1990s, sheds light on the economic and national constraints which limit the discretionary power of local mayors. In the Israeli case, the responses of the mayors to the settlement of immigrants in their towns range from active endorsement of a policy of immigrant absorption to objection and protest against it, while remaining within the boundaries and legitimacy of the Zionist conception of ‘homecoming’. In this sense, decentralisation emphasises the separateness of small peripheral towns and their mayors, in contrast to the assumption of political realignment between the urban and the national that brings cities ‘back in’.

Notes

1. This term is chosen for brevity, it includes many sub-groups—Georgians, Uzbeks, Ukrainians and so on.

2. These documents are in the archives of the Northern and Southern Regional Planning Committees.

3. The immigrants from the former Soviet Union are highly educated. Approximately 60 per cent of Russian immigrants in the workforce are engaged in academic, scientific and white-collar professions, as compared with 28 per cent of the veteran Israeli workers (Central Bureau of Statistics, Citation1998).

4. Dimona is a DT in the southern periphery. Due to its relative isolation, it has long suffered economic and social deprivation, since the reasons for its foundation were primarily political, rather than having a true economic rationale.

5. Yedioth Aharonoth (‘latest news’) is the most popular daily newspaper in Israel.

6. From an interview with Albert Asaf, Dimona's deputy mayor, October 2000.

7. From an interview with Yair Hazan, September 1998.

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