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Government, Elections, Judiciary ©Professor Gad Barzilai.

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Presentation on theme: "Government, Elections, Judiciary ©Professor Gad Barzilai."— Presentation transcript:

1 Government, Elections, Judiciary ©Professor Gad Barzilai

2 Parliamentarian Sovereignty Formally, the sovereign power is embedded in the Knesset.

3 Parliamentarian Democracy National and local elections [1949- ] Elections in a multi-partisan system The government is part of parliament and should get its vote of confidence A constructive vote of non-confidence

4 Electoral Turnout in Comparison

5 Labor Party as Dominant [1932-1974] The Roots of domination Social class Political organization Nation building

6 The Roots of Decline The challenge of Peace The challenge of Social Justice The challenge of Ethnicity Institutional fragmentation The 1973 War

7 Likud- Roots of Ruling [1977-1992] From a small opposition to a ruling party

8 Roots of Likud Rise The Power of Middle Class The Leadership of Begin From War to War The Mizrachi Voting The Pressures of Economic Capitalism and Liberalization The Occupation of the 1967 Territories

9 The Decline of Likud and Labor The War in Lebanon and the development of a new civil society [1982-1985] The collapse of the Oslo Accords [1993- 2000] The emergence of Shas [1984- ] The emergence of centrist political parties [2003- ]

10 Basic Electoral Statistics

11 Centrist Parties- A Change? Dash Shinui Kadima

12 Religious Parties– A Nation-State? NRP [Mafdal] Agudath Yisrael

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14 Shas- Power through Ethnic Mobilization - Observant Jews from Mizrachi origins - Replacing the State as a venue of social welfare - Building a system of education - Ultra-Orthodox leadership - Pragmatism in national security issues - Veto position in coalition building

15 Arab-Palestinian Parties: Bi- Nationalism?

16 Far Right- Arabs??

17 Zionist Left- Equality and Zionism?

18 From Partisan Hegemony to Judicial Politics

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20 The Chief Justice Aharon Barak Dorit Beinish

21 Liberal feminists are using litigation in order overcome individual discrimination.

22 Same-Sex Marriage: Equality?

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24 Israeli Arab-Palestinians

25 And the 1967 Occupied Territories?

26 A “Jewish and Democratic” State? What Does It Mean? Contentions around a Legal Ideology

27 No Constitution; Basic Laws Basic Law: The Knesset [1958] Basic Law: Israel Lands [1960] Basic Law: The President [1964] Basic Law: The Government [1968] Basic Law: The State Economy[1975] Basic Law: The Army [1976]

28 Basic Laws Basic Law: Jerusalem [1980] Basic Law: The Judiciary [1984] Basic Law: State Comptroller [1988]

29 Law of Return 1950 Absentee Property Act 1950 Citizenship Law 1952

30 New Basic Laws Basic Law: Human Dignity [1992] Basic Law: Freedom of Vocation [1992/1994]. A “Constitutional Revolution”?

31 Institutional Ramifications Judicial Supremacy Executive Reactions Parliamentarian Reactions

32 Religious Parties– A Democracy? NRP [Mafdal] Agudath Yisrael

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34 Centrist Parties-A New Balance? Dash Shinui Kadima

35 Zionist Left-Privatization of Religion

36 Far Right- A Territorial Jewish State

37 Arab-Palestinian Parties: A Secular Bi- National State

38 The Challenge of Constitutional Accountability

39 The Active Field of NGOs


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