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Original Articles

The Political Agenda and Policy-Making: The Case of Emigration from Israel

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Pages 819-844 | Published online: 15 Jul 2008

REFERENCES

  • 1. See Bachi, (1986). The democratic crisis of the Jewish nation (in Hebrew). Ha'aretz June 1. Bachi's report and its implications were discussed at a cabinet session on November 11, 1986.
  • 2. See, for example, Kass, D., & Lipset, S. M. (1979). Issues in exile. Commentary 68.
  • Lahis , S. 1980 . Israelis in the U.S.: A report , Jerusalem : The Jewish Agency . (in Hebrew).
  • 4. See Government yearbook for 1981 (in Hebrew) Jerusalem: The Ministry of Culture and Education. State of Israel, p. 7.
  • 5. This subject has been treated at length by: Fein, A. (1978). The process of migration: Israeli emigration to the United States, Ph.D. dissertation. School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western University, pp. 3–5; Plaut, S. E. (1982). The out movements of Israelis. Discussion Paper, 316, Haifa: Technion. Lamdany, R. Emigration from Israel. Discussion Paper, 82.08. Jerusalem: The Falk Institute. Friedberg, A. Yerida: The pull and the push. Forum 61, 23–31.
  • Easton , D. An approach to the political system . World Politics 9 , 383 – 400 .
  • Cobb , R. W. , Ross , J. K. and Cass , M. H. 1976 . Agenda building as a comparative political process . The American Political Science Review , 70 : 126 – 138 .
  • 8. Ibid.
  • 9. Ibid.
  • 10. Ibid.
  • 11. Ibid.
  • Kingston , J. W. 1984 . Agendas, alternatives and public policies , VII – VIII . Boston : Little Brown .
  • 13. Ibid, 112.
  • 14. Ibid, 69.
  • 15. Ibid, 188, 190, 193.
  • Lutrin , C. E. . The politics of agenda setting: The case of Israeli emigration policy . Papers presented to the Western Political Science Association Meetings . Jerusalem, Israel. March 20 ,
  • Sharkansky , I. 1984 . Second thoughts about the politics of audit (in Hebrew) . Iyunim Bebikoret Hamedina , 38 ( 36 )
  • 18. Cobb et al., op. cit.
  • 19. Friedberg, op. cit.
  • 1981 . Guidelines for the Government Formed in 1981 , Jerusalem : Israel Government Printer . (in Hebrew). Government Yearbook,
  • 21. Cobb et al., op. cit.
  • 22. Cobb et al., op. cit.
  • 23. Cobb et al., op. cit.
  • 24. We would like to expect that (a) the greater the significance of the issue, and (b) the more isolated the initiating group, and (c) the more protected the period during which the issue remains on the public agenda and (d) the lower the probability that the government will tackle the problem on its own — the more likely will the choice strategies be violence or the threat of violence and institutional sanctions, rather than working through agents and attempting to obtain direct access to the government; Cobb et al., op. cit.
  • Friedberg , A. 1984 . “ A comprehensive annotated bibliography on emigration from Israel was published by ” . In A phenomenon called emigration: An annotated bibliography (in Hebrew) , Jerusalem : DA Information Centre, Publications Service .
  • 26. Cohen, E. (1959). Research on the causes of emigration from Israel: A summarizing report (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: The Hebrew University, Department of Sociology: Chapter from this study was also published in Lissak, M., Ed. (1969). Immigrants in Israel: A reader (in Hebrew); Jerusalem: Akademon pp. 787–808.
  • Savan , D. 1955 . “ Newcomers from Israel. (1955) ” . Toronto : University of Toronto Press .
  • For example, Hovne, A . 1967 . On the brain drain from Israel . Jewish Journal of Sociology , II ( I ) : 58 – 65 .
  • Pryves , M. 1967 . The travels and emigration of medical school graduates to the US (in Hebrew) . Harefuah , 72 ( 8 ) : 311
  • 30. For example Elizur, D, & Elizur, M. (1975). To remain or to emigrate? The characteristics of potential emigration among immigrants from the Soviet Union (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Institute for Applied Social Research. Central Bureau of Statistics. (1973). A survey of the absorption of immigrants: Emigration from among new immigrants with two years of their arrival (immigrants and potential immigrants arriving during the period of September 1969 – August 1970) (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Ministry of Immigrant Absorption: Spiegelman, A. (1977). Trends in the emigration of immigrants from Israel in 1975/76 (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Ministry of Immigrant Absorption:
  • Etzioni-Levy , C. 1971 . Patterns of attitudes of Israeli students toward emigration from Israel , Tel Aviv : Tel Aviv University, Department of Education and Sociology . (in Hebrew).
  • Tichon , S. 1971 . Attitudes of Israeli youth toward emigration from Israel: An examination of national ties from a psychological perspective , Tel Aviv : Tel Aviv University, Department of Psychology . (in Hebrew). M.A. thesis.
  • See, for example, Rabi, Z. Emigration from Israel . 1976 . Supplement to the Statistical Monthly Review , 27 ( 10 ) : 1 – 22 . (in Hebrew).
  • 34. For example, Fein, op. cit. Kass, D. & Lipset, S. op. cit.
  • 35. For example, Toren, N. (1970). Israeli returnees (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: The Hebrew University. Elizur, D, & Elizur, M. (1974). Long is the way back (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Institute of Applied Social Research. Fein, A. (1980). Returnees on the thirtieth anniversary of the state of Israel (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Ministry for Immigrant Absorption and the Hebrew University.
  • See Lahis, S . 1980 . Israelis in the U.S.: A report (in Hebrew) , Jerusalem : The Jewish Agency .
  • 37. Ibid.
  • 38. Letter of resignation (in Hebrew) submitted on February 4, 1981 to Dulzin, Arie L., Chairman of the Zionist Executive.
  • 39. See Lutrin, op. cit., 6–9.
  • 40. See ELI. (1984). Ezrachim limni'at Yeridah (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: ELI Association. pp. 26–27. Included are photocopies of cables, dating July 21 and August 16, 1981, sent by the association's chairman listing the association's demands; also the photocopy of the cable of reply by Prime Minister Menachem Begin, who states that he had authorized Deputy Minister Shilansky, Dov to handle “an effort of major importance in combating emigration for the Land of Israel.”
  • 41. Ibid, 34–39.
  • 42. Ibid.
  • 43. Ibid, 40, 42, 47.
  • 44. Compare Friedberg, op. cit., 7, 21, 25, 28, 29.
  • 45. Advertisements on ELI's behalf of ELI association on this matter were e.g., appeared in the Jerusalem Post of May 11 and May 19, 1981, and in Ha'aretz of May 23, 1981.
  • 46. Compare ELI. Report of Income and Expenditure for March 4, 1982. Also the association's financial report for the period April 1, 1982 – March 31, 1985, and for the period April 1, 1985 – March 31, 1986.
  • 47. Among the association's founders were a former legal advisor to the Government, the President of the Chamber of Advocates, a poet, the Director General of the Jewish Agency, the Director General of the Comptroller's Office of the Zionist Organization, and a professor of medicine.
  • 48. see, for example, inter alia, summary of the debates of the Immigration and Absorption Committee of the Knesset on the subject of Emigration from Israel of March 10, 1981; minutes of the Knesset debates for the sessions of November 23, 1981; November 26–30, 1981; December 29–30, 1981 (in Hebrew). These take up a total of approximately 150 pages.
  • 49. Compare March 18, 1982, letter from the head of activities for the prevention of emigration to the Deputy Minister, and the March 23, 1982, reply of the Deputy Minister.
  • Compare Friedberg , A. 1980 . Forum 61 , 27 – 30 . Yerida : The pull and the push .
  • 51. Compare Summary Report on Activities Carried Out to the Sphere of the Prevention of Emigration from Israel. Jerusalem: Prime Minister's Office, (in Hebrew). September 1984.
  • Kfir , A. and Friedberg , A. 1987 . Determination of policy in the area of emigration from Israel . State, Government and International Relations , 26 : 33 – 56 . (in Hebrew)
  • 53. Compare, for example, Par. 9 of the Demobilized Soldiers Law. Sefer Hachukkim 1121 (in Hebrew): July 11, 1984.
  • 54. Government Resolution 478/3 of March 4, 1984 (in Hebrew).
  • 55. Document of the Ministry of Immigration to the Knesset Immigration and Absorption Committee (in Hebrew), May 20, 1983.
  • 56. Conclusions of the Committee of Directors General for the Prevention of Emigration (in Hebrew), Jerusalem, September 1981.
  • 57. Ibid, 1
  • 58. Ibid, 4
  • 59. Ibid, 3.
  • 60. Ibid, 5.
  • 61. Ibid, 5.
  • 62. See section entitled “Pseudo-Items on the Political Agenda” in the present article.
  • 63. See sections entitled “Emigration on the Political Agenda and Governmental Policy” and “The Changing Status of the Issue of Emigration on the Political Agenda.” in the present article.
  • 64. This is a representative sample of the Jewish population in Israel.
  • 65. All the data of the survey carried out from March 1984 through December 1985 were published in Ha'aretz. January 1, 1987.
  • 66. The Hebrew patriarch Abraham was the first immigrant as well as the first emigrant. Very few members of the Second Aliyah remained in the country; the majority left.
  • 67. Compare Sharkansky, I. Avoiding the irresistible: Should the Israeli Government combat jewish emigration? The Jerusalem Quarterly 1987, 41, 95–111; on this matter see also Herman, F., & Lafontaine, D. (1983). In our Footsteps: Israeli migration to the U.S. and Los Angeles. M.A. thesis. Jerusalem: Israel. Hebrew Union College in Cooperation with the University of Southern California.
  • 68. A good example of a subject which failed to elicit public debate was the issue of the production of the Israeli designed fighter aircraft, the Lavi.
  • 69. A number of arguments were discussed at length by Sharknasky, Ibid.
  • 70. For examples of vague and noncommittal consensus formulations in this regard: see Resolutions of the 30th Zionist Congress, December 1982. (1983). (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Organization Department World Zionist Organization. (Sections 5–74).
  • 71. These movements include for example the Immigration Movement of Northern America; dozens of Zionist youth movements of all political and ideological associations; the “Tehillah” Religious Immigration Movement; the “Telem” Movement for Zionist Fulfillment, most of whose members are Jewish students. The Ayala Organization of Returning Immigrants and “Reshit Geulah,” the Immigrant organization founded by Rabbi Shlomo Riskin of Efrat. All of the members of these movements committed themselves to make “Aliyah” (to settle in Israel).
  • See Comptroller's Office, World Zionist Organization . 1982 . Report 23 to the 30th Zionist Congress , 193 – 241 . Jerusalem : the section Keren Hayesod—United Appeal for Israel, (pp . (in Hebrew).
  • 73. So, for example, see the appeal of the Chairman of the Zionist Executive at the meeting of the Zionist Executive Committee on July 2, 1987, and the address of the Chairman of the Younger General of the Zionist Movement in the same session.
  • 74. In this connection see Resolutions of the 30th Zionist Congress, Ibid. Sections 54 and 55.
  • 75. See the sections on population in the annual reports of the Bank of Israel for 1981 and 1985 (in Hebrew). In 1986 there was also a negative balance of migration.
  • See Lahis, S . 1980 . Israelis in the U.S.: A report , 1 Jerusalem : The Jewish Agency . (in Hebrew).
  • 77. See Bachi, R. The democratic crisis of the Jewish nation (in Hebrew). Ha'aretz June 1, 1986, p. 4. Bachi's account served as the basis for a government debate on the country's demographic problems.
  • 78. See Lutrin, C. E. The politics of agenda setting: The case of Israeli emigration policy. Papers presented to the Western Political Science Association Meetings, Jerusalem: Israel. March 20, 1986, p. 1.
  • 79. See Herman & Lafontaine, op. cit., who point out that the children of the majority of Israeli emigrants are not enrolled in Jewish schools and do not speak Hebrew. Except for a small minority of religious emigrants, who have retained their Jewish identity, most have become estranged from Judaism.

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