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The Knapp Family Foundation MA/Doctoral Fellowship | 2025–2026

20 January, 2025

The Knapp Family Foundation MA/Doctoral Fellowship is intended for advanced students at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem who have shown exceptional excellence, depth and originality in their academic work.

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Their research focuses on the phenomena of antisemitism, racism, discrimination and different forms of persecution throughout history, from different disciplinary angles and/or comparative perspectives in the fields of Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences and Law.

The Fellowship is offered for the academic year 2025–2026. An extension may be granted for one more year, conditional on significant progress in the research and approval by SICSA’s Academic Committee. Fellows are expected to be present at the Center for no less than three days a week and to participate in the Center’s academic activities.

The Fellowship offers an annual stipend of $12,000 for MA students or $15,000 for PhD students. 

Last date to submit applications is April 30, 2025.

 

Application Submission

A. Please fill out the Online Personal Details Form

B. Please upload the following documents according to the upload instructions:

►      Statement of research plan (3 pages, with title)

►      Curriculum vitae

►      List of publications (for PhD students)

►      Grades sheet

C. Two letters of recommendation - sent according to the guidelines described here

D. Please follow the instructions shown on 'Submission Status' page

 

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News

The Robert Wistrich Prizes | 2025

20 January, 2025

 

The Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism Announces

The Robert Wistrich Prizes | 2025
for Outstanding Advanced Students, Young Researchers and Junior Faculty

 

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The Knapp Family Foundation Post-Doctoral / Junior Faculty Fellowship | 2025–2026

20 January, 2025

 

The Knapp Family Foundation Post-Doctoral / Junior Faculty Fellowship is intended for scholars from Israel and abroad who have demonstrated exceptional excellence, depth, and originality in their academic work.

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Their research focuses on antisemitism, racism, discrimination, and various forms of persecution throughout history, examined from different disciplinary angles and comparative perspectives in the fields of Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, and Law.

The Center will award up to two one-year fellowships — beginning October 1, 2025. Fellows are expected to be present at the Center for no less than three days a week and to participate in the Center's academic activities.

The Fellowship offers an annual stipend of $30,000.

Qualified candidates must have completed their PhD no earlier than October, 1, 2020. Candidates who have not yet graduated may apply; their acceptance will be conditional upon approval of their degree by October 1, 2025.

 

Last date to submit applications is April 30, 2025.

 

Application Submission

A. Please fill out the Online Personal Details Form

B. Please upload the following documents according to the upload instructions:

►      Statement of research plan (3 pages, with title)

►      Curriculum vitae

►      List of publications

►      Summary of the PhD (up to 3 pages)

►      PhD degree certificate

 

C. Two letters of recommendation, including one from the applicant's dissertation advisor and one from a Hebrew University faculty member willing to serve as the applicant's sponsor - sent according to the guidelines described here

D. Please follow the instructions shown on 'Submission Status' pag

 

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Robert Wistrich Award Recepients 2024

14 September, 2024

 

SICSA is proud to announce the recipients of the Robert Wistrich Award in the Field of Antisemitism and Racism for 2024:

Ms. Nureet Dermar
Ms. Efrat Komisar
Mr. Lukas Meissel
Ms. Lital Spivak

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Nureet Dermer holds a Ph.D. from the Department of Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her dissertation, "Between Expulsions: Jews and Christians in Fourteenth Century Northern France," explores the lives of northern French Jews, particularly in Paris, during the turbulent fourteenth century. Her research delves into Jewish-Christian relations, local identities, and the dynamics of exclusion and inclusion, focusing on how Jews and other marginalized groups coped with expulsion. Dermer is expanding her work to examine the paths of expelled French Jewish families outside the French realm, studying their challenges and survival strategies after arriving in new communities. She holds a B.A. in economics and accountancy and was a certified public accountant before transitioning to historical research.

Efrat Komisar is a Ph.D. candidate in the History Department at the Hebrew University, writing her dissertation under the supervision of Prof. Ofer Ashkenazi and Prof. Amos Goldberg. Her research focuses on photographs taken in the Warsaw ghetto by German and Jewish photographers. It offers a detailed examination of some of the most well-known photographs from the ghetto, highlighting the distinct perspectives of the photographers. Her work emphasizes the photographs of Propaganda Company 689, a widely recognized collection. These images, often used in books, exhibitions, and online as documentation, are regarded as reliable sources of information about ghetto life. However, given their original propaganda purpose, any use of these images as evidence of Jewish life must be critically examined. Her research addresses questions central to the use of German propaganda material related to the Holocaust, particularly the extent to which such material can be considered historical documentation and what insights it can provide about Jewish life during the Holocaust.

Lital Spivak's doctoral research centers on the "New Bezalel" (Bezalel Academy of Arts, 1935-1965) during and after World War II and the Holocaust. Her work examines the period following the rise of the Nazi Party to power and how the institution played a role in the rescue of Jews. Correspondence between the "New Bezalel," Jewish organizations, and prospective students from Western and Central Europe reveals efforts to bring Jews to the Land of Israel. After the war, many Holocaust survivors enrolled in the "New Bezalel," with some becoming prominent artists. In 1946, the Bezalel Museum held a groundbreaking exhibition titled "Behind the Bars – Paintings from the Concentration Camps," which exposed Holocaust imagery to the Israeli public for the first time. Minkin's research explores the role of "New Bezalel" in rescuing Jews and its impact on Holocaust memory in Israel. She holds a BA and MA from the Department of Art History at the Hebrew University, where her thesis, supervised by Prof. Gal Ventura, focused on 19th-century French depictions of fortune tellers. Minkin is currently a fellow at the Research Institute for Contemporary Jewry and the Center for Jewish Art.

Lukas Meissel is a historian and post-doctoral research fellow at the Richard Koebner Minerva Center for German History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, supported by a grant from the Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah. His current project, "Photographic Testimonies: An Integrated Visual History of Survival and Resistance," builds on his Ph.D. thesis, which examined SS photography in concentration camps. Meissel holds a BA and MA in history and contemporary history from the University of Vienna and has worked as an archivist in the Jewish Community of Vienna. He has received numerous fellowships and awards in Israel, the USA, Germany, Austria, and France, including the Herbert-Steiner-Anerkennungspreis and the Theodor-Körner-Preis. His research focuses on Holocaust and genocide studies, visual history, US-Israeli-Austrian relations, and antisemitism. He has published articles in international journals and an award-winning monograph on perpetrator photography in Mauthausen, along with edited volumes on Holocaust studies and education.

 

 

 

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News

The Robert Wistrich Prizes | 2024

18 March, 2024

The Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism Announces

The Robert Wistrich Prizes | 2024
for Outstanding Advanced Students, Young Researchers and Junior Faculty

 

News

The Knapp Family Foundation Post-Doctoral / Junior Faculty Fellowship | 2024–2025

18 March, 2024

The Knapp Family Foundation Post-Doctoral / Junior Faculty Fellowship is intended for scholars from Israel and abroad who have shown exceptional excellence, depth and originality in their academic work, and whose research focuses on the phenomena of antisemitism, racism, discrimination and different forms of persecution throughout history, from different disciplinary angles and/or comparative perspectives in the fields of Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences and Law.

 

News

The Knapp Family Foundation MA / Doctoral Fellowship | 2024–2025

17 March, 2024

The Knapp Family Foundation MA/Doctoral Fellowship is intended for advanced students at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem who have shown exceptional excellence, depth and originality in their academic work, and whose research focuses on the phenomena of antisemitism, racism, discrimination and different forms of persecution throughout history, from different disciplinary angles and/or comparative perspectives in the fields of Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences and Law.

Robert Wistrich Awards Recipients 2023

8 June, 2023

SICSA is proud to announce the recipients of the Robert Wistrich Awards in the Field of Antisemitism and Racism for 2023:

Mr. Tom Alfia
Mr. Noam Binstok
Ms. Aviya Doron
Mr. Eran Itskovich

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Tom Alfia is a PhD candidate in political science at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem under the supervision of Dr. Yiftah Elazar. His research, in the field of political theory, deals with the political philosophy of Hannah Arendt. Tom is supervising the online course on political existentialism in the Hebrew University titled “Hope: What Makes Us Human?”. Tom received his BA at the Hebrew University and was subsequently admitted to the Telem honors program for MA and Ph.D. in the Hebrew University’s Political Science department.

The article that won him the prize is part of his dissertation titled "Hannah Arendt and the Existential Foundations of Politics." In this article, he explicates Arendt's analysis of the totalitarian form of government for the purpose of reconstructing her framework to classify forms of government in general. He finds Arendt's analysis of totalitarianism fascinating. She claimed that at the base of totalitarian domination stands the radical and desperate experience of loneliness, felt by the masses of persons who participated, joined, or merely found legitimate, the totalitarian movements. From this radical experience of loneliness arose widespread susceptibility for ideological indoctrination – for example, the interpretation of the world in terms of an eternal racial struggle – but also the consent for, and active participation in, acts of terror. In this research, he argues that totalitarianism is unprecedented for Arendt because it is a frightening new way for people to live together: it is a shared life that is based on loneliness. The project aims at systematizing Arendt's framework for the classification of forms of government. Hopefully, such systematization would allow a renewed understanding of the different experiences persons share in their common life and an appreciation of their significance for political forms of organization.

Noam Binstok is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Economics at the Hebrew University. Under the supervision of Professor Asaf Zussman, he focuses on applied microeconomics with a particular interest in discrimination, bias, and social identity. Noam holds a B.A. in Economics and Middle Eastern Studies, as well as an M.A. in Economics, both from Hebrew University. During his studies, he gained valuable experience in intelligence gathering and analysis while working for specialized companies. His expertise in data-gathering and analysis plays a vital role in his current research pursuits.

His paper examines the extent to which personal biases affect political views, in the context of how anti-semitism influences opinions about Israel. Two empirical analyses are conducted. The first one analyzes social media chatter about Jews and Israel in the UK, revealing a strong, positive relationship between negative chatter about both of them at the daily-location level. In order to establish causality, social media chatter about a “Jewish” football team in the English Premier League (Tottenham) is used as an instrument for negative expressions about Jewish people to explain negativity towards Israel. The second empirical analysis uses the 2016 wave of the German Social Survey, which reveals a strong and robust relationship between holding anti-Israel views and several commonly used measures of anti-semitic beliefs. A causal interpretation of this finding is supported by an IV analysis motivated by Voigtländer and Voth (2015) who show that Nazi indoctrination during the WWII period had a lifelong impact on anti-semitic views. In both analyses, the IV estimates are considerably larger than OLS coefficients.

Aviya Doron is a PhD student at the Department of Jewish History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem under the supervision of Prof. Elisheva Baumgarten. Her research explores risk and trust in Jewish-Christian economic interactions in the German Empire (1280–1420). The questions at the heart of her research are how risk was conceptualized, experienced and overcome in interreligious personal contacts, and which institutionalized mechanisms governing economic exchange helped build and sustain trust. Combining legal and administrative archival sources in Latin and German with responsa literature, her research draws on institutional economic history, social-network analysis, and the history of daily life. Identifying and understanding mechanisms for evaluating risk and building trust can shed new light on the role of economic incentives in shaping the boundaries between religious conflict and daily economic and social contacts.

Doron’s article argues that the prevalence of credit transactions, in both interreligious as well as intra-religious exchange, brought with it other forms of ethical and moral concerns for both Jews and Christians. It also examines some of Jews’ moral concerns arising from the practice of extending credit, mostly focusing on moral conceptions regarding the boundaries of competition. With Jews embedded in the legal and cultural traditions of medieval Christian society, their attitudes toward economic morality will be discussed within the wider context of Christian cultural norms.

Eran Itskovich is a Ph.D. candidate at the Institute of Criminology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He received his B.A. in Sociology & Anthropology and Philosophy in 2016 and M.A. in Criminology (summa cum laude) in 2020 from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research interests include wrongful convictions, the association between economic inequality and crime, and proactive policing.

Applying multilevel analysis to data from the National Registry of Exonerations in the United States, His article compares the length of the exoneration process for members of racially marginalized minority groups who are shown to have been wrongfully convicted compared with their counterparts from the white majority group. The research’s results indicate that exonerees from racially marginalized groups serve more time out of their sentence compared to those who are white. Further analysis shows that these differences exist only with respect to exonerees in Republican-controlled states. These findings suggest that not only are racially marginalized minorities wrongfully convicted at higher rates, as found in previous studies, but also that they suffer longer periods of unjustified punishment.

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ACTA Volume 42, Issue 1: Anti-Semitism in the Propaganda and Public Discourse in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus during the Russia-Ukraine War (February – August 2022)

15 March, 2023

The new issue of Analysis of Current Trends in Antisemitism (ACTA) was published!

 

"Anti-Semitism in the Propaganda and Public Discourse in Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus during the Russia-Ukraine War (February – August 2022)" by Dr. Leonid (Leon) Gershovich

 

The paper explores and analises aspects of Antisimetism and the Jewish theme in the Russian, Belarusian and Ukraninan propaganda during the first seven months of the Russian-Ukrainian war.

 

Knapp Family Foundation Post-Doctoral / Junior Faculty Fellowship | 2023–2024

8 February, 2023

 

The Knapp Family Foundation Post-Doctoral / Junior Faculty Fellowship is intended for scholars from Israel and abroad who have shown exceptional excellence, depth and originality in their academic work, and whose research focuses on the phenomena of antisemitism, racism, discrimination and different forms of persecution throughout history, from different disciplinary angles and/or comparative perspectives in the fields of Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences and Law.