TY - JOUR
T1 - From subjects to citizens
T2 - On educational reforms and the demarcation of the "Israeli-Arabs"
AU - Levy, Gal
PY - 2005/7
Y1 - 2005/7
N2 - Based on a critical analysis of the Arab educational policy, from Israel's independence to the 1970s, this article examines the pivotal role of the state in engendering the trends of Palestinianization and Israelization that arguably characterize the attitude of the Arab minority to the Israeli state. Exploring the educational reforms of the 1960s and 1970s, it shows the contingent relation between ethnicity and the state, and also, the interrelationship between the intra-Jewish and Jewish-Arab divides. Looking at the ethnicization of social relations not as a preordained upshot of primordial realities, the history of the reforms unravels the changing patterns of inclusion and exclusion that result in demarcating the Arab minority as both Israeli and Palestinian, and in constructing the oxymoronic category of "Israeli-Arabs". Seen from the perspective of the goals for Arab and Jewish education, this category manifests the internalization of the "Arab Question" and the shift in educational policy from preclusion to incorporation, but also the limits of inclusion. These goals thus epitomize the ways in which the new discourse of meritocracy (resulting from the liberalizing of the economy and society) had determined civic equality between Arab and Jewish citizens, but equally important, the seclusion of the Arab minority from both the Jewish (ethnic) society and the Palestinian (national) collective. In this sense, I argue, neither Israelization nor Palestinianization were a matter of choice. Rather, both constitute the inevitable dual path for social and political inclusion, limited as it is.
AB - Based on a critical analysis of the Arab educational policy, from Israel's independence to the 1970s, this article examines the pivotal role of the state in engendering the trends of Palestinianization and Israelization that arguably characterize the attitude of the Arab minority to the Israeli state. Exploring the educational reforms of the 1960s and 1970s, it shows the contingent relation between ethnicity and the state, and also, the interrelationship between the intra-Jewish and Jewish-Arab divides. Looking at the ethnicization of social relations not as a preordained upshot of primordial realities, the history of the reforms unravels the changing patterns of inclusion and exclusion that result in demarcating the Arab minority as both Israeli and Palestinian, and in constructing the oxymoronic category of "Israeli-Arabs". Seen from the perspective of the goals for Arab and Jewish education, this category manifests the internalization of the "Arab Question" and the shift in educational policy from preclusion to incorporation, but also the limits of inclusion. These goals thus epitomize the ways in which the new discourse of meritocracy (resulting from the liberalizing of the economy and society) had determined civic equality between Arab and Jewish citizens, but equally important, the seclusion of the Arab minority from both the Jewish (ethnic) society and the Palestinian (national) collective. In this sense, I argue, neither Israelization nor Palestinianization were a matter of choice. Rather, both constitute the inevitable dual path for social and political inclusion, limited as it is.
KW - Citizenship
KW - Educational reform
KW - Ethinicity
KW - Palestinian minority in Israel
KW - State universalism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=22144432653&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13621020500147376
DO - 10.1080/13621020500147376
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AN - SCOPUS:22144432653
SN - 1362-1025
VL - 9
SP - 271
EP - 291
JO - Citizenship Studies
JF - Citizenship Studies
IS - 3
ER -