ARIEL UNIVERSITY a New Spirit of Academic Excellence Grows in the Biblical Heartland of Israel

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ARIEL UNIVERSITY a New Spirit of Academic Excellence Grows in the Biblical Heartland of Israel ARIEL UNIVERSITY A new spirit of academic excellence grows in the biblical heartland of Israel. Ariel University, Israel’s newest and fastest growing university, traces its beginnings back to 1982, receiving full university accreditation in 2012. Evolving into a world-class research institution, Ariel University proudly raises the standard for higher education in Israel. Academics Culture Society R&D Startup & Community Technology + 15,000 475 6 Students Second largest 25% of Over 475 Largest Jewish Established enrolled school of student senior employer in heritage on the values engineering in body faculty the region, courses are of academic Israel – 29% of pursuing members with 2500 mandatory excellence, student body medical employees for all Zionism and studies students democratic ideals ACADEMICS Innovative, multidisciplinary academics and research for the betterment of Israel and the world Schools & 7 Faculties Medicine Engineering Health Social Natural Communications Architecture Sciences Sciences & Sciences Humanities Research 30+Centers In the fields of: Health Security Energy Environment Technology Middle East Entrepreneurship SOCIETY Implementing practical programs to solve social issues. Drawing on proprietary intellectual property and working with government bodies, Ariel University provides practical options where most needed Many high-functioning autistic students possess the intellectual capability to succeed academically, but lack the support and social and communications skills to do so ASPA (Ariel Support Program for Program developed Largest Innovative "Buddy" Professional guidance and ASD) and pioneered in Israel program of its system integrating tailor-made support for by Ariel University kind in Israel them into student body individual needs Ariel University is committed to integrating immigrants into the academic arena 100 + Helping demobilized Supported by the Highest number Ethiopian Providing financial Uplifting soldiers achieve Israeli Ministries of Ethiopian students support for basic Immigrant mandatory academic of Labor & Social students in any needs: food, Communities enroll each year, levels via courses in Welfare and Israeli university more than in any clothing, living coordination with the Immigrant or college other university allowance, etc Israeli Defense Ministry Absorption 35Ariel has the highest number of FIDF IMPACT scholarship recipients - students who served in IDF combat units 30 25 FIDF 20 IMPACT Scholarships 15 Percent for students 10 from IDF combat units5 0 Ariel Semi Ben Gurion Hebrew IDC College of Ono Tel Aviv Bar Ilan Technion University Shimon University University Management Academic University University College Academic College Studies COMMUNITY Ariel University provides essential services to ALL demographics in the Shomron region First major medical center in the region Serving all residents in the region - Israelis and Palestinians; Residents from Central and Coastal Regions Ambulatory and short term hospitalization surgical services Emergency services Helmsley Regional Advanced imaging services, including MRI and CT Medical Center Teaching center integrating research with treatment Opening 2020 Clinics treating communication disorders, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, nutritional and psychological counseling. Community Supported by all major Israeli HMOs Clinics State-of-the-art Medical Simulation Center Simulating real-life medical and mass emergency situations, terror attacks and accidents Morris Family Incorporated into medical and paramedical curricula (nursing, physiotherapy, Medical social work, psychology) Simulation Integrated into first responders training including MDA and IDF etc. Center STARTUP & TECHNOLOGY Ariel University fuses real-world experience with groundbreaking research to develop innovative platforms and practical applications for the defense, corporate and security industries Led by Ariel Scientific Innovations Ltd. (Ariel University’s technology commercialization office) 75+ 33+ 70+ 20+ 9+ 30+ Research Active Granted Active patent New patent Active Licensing Commercialization projects patents families applications startups agreements each year Cutting-edge hub for theoretical and applied research activities Innovating real-world solutions to complex issues on all cyber-security frontiers Leading worldwide battle against cyber-attacks through unique training developed from IDF model of random-variable assaults Ariel Cyber Innovation Center (ACIC) Cyber Global Advance Training Advanced Analytics Simulator Security Security Operation Center and Cryptographic Range Cooperation Center (SOC) Research Established in 2006 to provide solutions for Israel's pressing national security needs Detection of Detection of Development of Development concealed tunnels and compact radar of non-lethal The Homeland weapons and supervision over to identify land systems for Security R & D Center explosives to subterranean movement in crowd control provide port infrastructures dark and foggy security conditions R&D Ariel University stands at the cutting edge of developing new technologies advancing the State of Israel in the hi-tech defense and agritech fields Will display the rich history of Samaria, the Nation of Host Poetry Slams & *Museum Israel’s only academic center for Oenology Israel, local archeological finds and revolving displays Spoken Word Led by the Eastern R&D regional center Aims to lead the technological development of viticulture and oenology in Israel ContainsOverlooking a research the Samaria winery hills, and thea wine amphitheater analysis lab seats over 1,500 TheThe Samuel Samson Aba andFamily Sisel Wine Klurman Hosting Concerts, plays Serving the student body Amphitheater 5 1 4 3 Research PhD and standupStartup companycomedy Technological andAcres residents of research with of Samariavineyards, Center researchers (PI) (Enolog LTD) patents in various including the endogenous developmental stages Israeli grapevine collection Ariel University is pioneering the complex field of expanding usable bands in the *The Motovich electromagnetic spectrum with the goal of revolutionizing massive multimedia data transfer Center for Jewish Includes classes and seminars on a wide range of Jewish and Zionist topics. Heritage and enhancing remote sensing and radar detection capabilities, among other applications Wide Band Increased stand-off Facilitates transfer Enhanced high Superior cellular Wireless Wireless*Cinema detection of weapons, of massive resolution communication- power Communications ammunition, and multimedia data radar 5G technology beaming explosives regardless of loads weather conditions Ariel University is developing the 'Wave' of the future: Wireless power transfer (WPT) wirelessly transfers energy via waves from one location providing power to another Wave Energy harvesting from air environment Increases Can recharge Safer for people Wireless Focused power beam transmits energy to mobility UAVs/drones and environment Power remote or difficult to reach locations remotely Beaming CULTURE Ariel University is dedicated to creating an enriching and stimulating cultural and social experience for our students *Museum Will display the rich history of Samaria, the Nation of Host Poetry Slams & Israel, local archeological finds and changing exhibitions Spoken Word Overlooking the Hills of Samaria, the amphitheater seats over 1,500 The Samuel Aba and Sisel Klurman Amphitheater Hosting concerts, plays Serving the student body and standup comedy and residents of Samaria *The Motovich Center for Jewish Heritage Includes classes and seminars on a wide range of Jewish and Zionist topics Serving as a platform for Providing a venue for Operating as lecture halls *Cinema budding film makers film study during the day Hosting prayers 3 times a day, Religious and secular Discussions between religious Beit Shalom including Sabbath services students sharing Sabbath meals and secular students Synagogue Sport Centers State-of-the-art Sports Facilities Health and Fitness Classes Country Club and Gyms *In progress Ariel University: Partner With Us and Make a Difference For tax deductible donations: Ariel University For US Donations Please contact: Ariel U Fund Bank Leumi Le-Israel B.M. Acc Name: Ariel U Fund Branch: 817 [email protected] Bank: Bank of Melbourne Acc No: 562100/60 Acc Type: Society Cheque Account SWIFT: LUMIILITXXX Acc no: 415613909 IBAN: IL730108170000056210060 Branch no: 193-879 19 Hahasmonaim St., Tel Aviv, Israel British Friends of Ariel University Ne'eman Foundation Canada Education in Israel Trust Business Premium TD Canada Trust Account 1677 Avenue Road Barclay’s Bank PLC Toronto, ON M5M 3Y3 St. Johns’ Wood Area Branches Institution: 004 London NW3 Branch: 0252 08-45755555 Bank No.: 2 Current Acc No: 40308471 Account No.: 02525226859 Deposit Acc No: 40308463 Account Name: Sort Code: 20-74-63 Ne'eman Foundation Canada SWIFTBIC: BARCGB22 For more information contact: [email protected].
Recommended publications
  • Public Companies Profiting from Illegal Israeli Settlements on Palestinian Land
    Public Companies Profiting from Illegal Israeli Settlements on Palestinian Land Yellow highlighting denotes companies held by the United Methodist General Board of Pension and Health Benefits (GBPHB) as of 12/31/14 I. Public Companies Located in Illegal Settlements ACE AUTO DEPOT LTD. (TLV:ACDP) - owns hardware store in the illegal settlement of Ma'ale Adumim http://www.ace.co.il/default.asp?catid=%7BE79CAE46-40FB-4818-A7BF-FF1C01A96109%7D, http://www.machat.co.il/businesses.php, http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/14/world/middleeast/14israel.html?_r=3&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&, http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/snapshot/snapshot.asp?ticker=ACDP:IT ALON BLUE SQUARE ISRAEL LTD. (NYSE:BSI) - has facilities in the Barkan and Atarot Industrial Zones and operates supermarkets in many West Bank settlements www.whoprofits.org/company/blue- square-israel, http://www.haaretz.com/business/shefa-shuk-no-more-boycotted-chain-renamed-zol-b-shefa-1.378092, www.bsi.co.il/Common/FilesBinaryWrite.aspx?id=3140 AVGOL INDUSTRIES 1953 LTD. (TLV:AVGL) - has a major manufacturing plant in the Barkan Industrial Zone http://www.unitedmethodistdivestment.com/ReportCorporateResearchTripWestBank2010FinalVersion3.pdf (United Methodist eyewitness report), http://panjiva.com/Avgol-Ltd/1370180, http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/business/avgol- sees-bright-future-for-nonwoven-textiles-in-china-1.282397 AVIS BUDGET GROUP INC. (NASDAQ:CAR) - leases cars in the illegal settlements of Beitar Illit and Modi’in Illit http://rent.avis.co.il/en/pages/car_rental_israel_stations, http://www.carrentalisrael.com/car-rental- israel.asp?refr= BANK HAPOALIM LTD. (TLV:POLI) - has branches in settlements; provides financing for housing projects in illegal settlements, mortgages for settlers, and financing for the Jerusalem light rail project, which connects illegal settlements with Jerusalem http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/business/bank-hapoalim-to-lead-financing-for-jerusalem-light-rail-line-1.97706, http://www.whoprofits.org/company/bank-hapoalim BANK LEUMI LE-ISRAEL LTD.
    [Show full text]
  • H.E. Mr. Ariel Sharon Prime Minister of the State of Israel
    Statement by H.E. Mr. Ariel Sharon Prime Minister of the State of Israel High-Level Plenary Meeting of the 60'h Session of the General Assembly United Nations, New York 15 September 2005 Translation Prime Minister Ariel Sharon' Speech at the United Nations Assembly September 15, 2005 My friends and colleagues, heads and representatives of the UN member states, I arrived here from Jerusalem, the capital of the Jewish people for over 3,000 years, and the undivided and eternal capital of the State of Israel. At the outset, I would like to express the profound feelings of empathy of the people of Israel for the American nation, and our sincere condolences to the families who lost their loved ones. I wish to encourage my friend, President George Bush, and the American people, in their determined effo rts to assist the victims of the hur ricane and rebuild the ruins after the destruction. The State of Israel, which the United States stood beside at times of trial, is ready to extend any assistance at its disposal in this immense humanitarian mission. Ladies and Gentlemen, I stand before you at the gate of nations as a Jew and as a citizen of the free and sovereign State of Israel, a proud representative of an ancient people, whose numbers are few, but whose contribution to civilization and to the values of ethics, justice and faith, surrounds the world and encompasses history. The Jewish people have a long memory, the memory which united the exiles of Israel for thousands of years: a memory which has its origin in G-d's commandment to our forefather Abraham: "Go forth!" and continued with the receiving of the Torah at the foot of Mount Sinai and the wanderings of the children of Israel in the desert, led by Moses on their journey to the promised land, the land of Israel.
    [Show full text]
  • CONFIDENTIAL Prepared by the Negotiations Support Unit
    CONFIDENTIAL MEMORANDUM To: Dr. Saeb Erekat From: Negotiations Support Unit Subject: 1967 border, land swaps and Hillary Clinton’s parameters Date: 23 December 2009 This memo provides analysis on three related issues that have arisen in recent discussions on the peace process: 1. Reference to the “1967 border with agreed swaps” in a UNSC resolution; 2. Requesting US determination of a percentage for land swaps, and; 3. Hillary Clinton’s “parameters”. 1. Reference to the 1967 border with agreed swaps in a UNSC resolution At least two potential benefits may exist in seeking a United Nations Security Council Resolution that re‐ affirms the Palestinian people’s right to a state of their own in all of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, including East Jerusalem. First, such a resolution can reinforce the illegality and illegitimacy of Israeli claims over all of the oPt as delimited by the 4 June 1967 line. Second, such a resolution can reaffirm the continued applicability of international humanitarian law, namely, the Fourth Geneva Convention and the Hague Regulations, to all of the territory occupied by Israel in 1967. One risk in pursuing such a resolution, however, is that it may either directly or indirectly dilute UNSCR 242 and universally recognized Israeli obligations under IHL, specifically the requirement that Israel withdraw fully to the June 4 1967 line. This risk would arise, for example, if the resolution refers to potential land swaps, even if the resolution specifies that such swaps must be ‘mutually agreed.’ The mere introduction of the option of swapping territory in a UNSC resolution can, and likely will, be used by Israel and others to argue that the international community no longer views the 4 June 1967 line as sacrosanct.
    [Show full text]
  • Ariel Settlement Fact Sheet 12/07/24 11:12
    Ariel settlement fact sheet 12/07/24 11:12 Published on B'Tselem (http://www.btselem.org) Home > Ariel settlement fact sheet Ariel settlement fact sheet Ariel settlement fact sheet [1] September 27, 2010 1. Ariel is an Israeli settlement in the Salfit District in the central West Bank, some 16.5 kilometers east of the Green Line, with a population of 16,800 (at the end of 2009). It was founded in 1978 on land that was seized under the false pretext of imperative military needs and on land that was declared state land, including cultivated farmland of villages in the district and on rocky land the villagers used for grazing their flocks. The state's declaration of state land was made in breach of the right to due process and relied on a distorted interpretation of the binding legislation in the West Bank. The settlement's municipal area contains many enclaves of privately-owned Palestinian land, whose owners are not allowed access to them (see map [2]). 2. Ariel was established in the heart of Salfit District, in a way that blocks the urban development of the regional town of Salfit. Israel does not allow lands to be transferred from the Area C category (lands that are under Israeli control and comprise 60 percent of the West Bank) to the Area A and Area B categories, which are under Palestinian control, and thus prevents future development of Salfit. 3. The Separation Barrier built around Ariel created a wedge that separates seven villages north of it (Hares, Kifl Hares, Qira, Marda, Jamma'in, Zeita-Jamma'in, and Deir Istiya), which are home to some 25,000 Palestinians, from the district seat, Salfit (10,000 residents), where the villagers receive a variety of services.
    [Show full text]
  • The Case of Druze Society and Its Integration in Higher Education in Israel
    International Education Studies; Vol. 13, No. 8; 2020 ISSN 1913-9020 E-ISSN 1913-9039 Published by Canadian Center of Science and Education The Case of Druze Society and its Integration in Higher Education in Israel Aml Amer1 & Nitza Davidovitch1 1 Department of Education, Ariel University, Ariel, Israel Correspondence: Nitza Davidovitch, Department of Education, Ariel University, Ariel, Israel, Kiriat Hamada 3, Ariel, Israel. E-mail: [email protected] Received: February 23, 2020 Accepted: April 24, 2020 Online Published: July 23, 2020 doi:10.5539/ies.v13n8p68 URL: https://doi.org/10.5539/ies.v13n8p68 Abstract In this work, we elaborate on the changes and transformations in the Israeli education system (including higher education) from Israel’s independence in 1948 to 2019. Specifically, the study places special emphasis on developments commencing in 1976 in response to the establishment of a separate administrative division for Druze and Circassian Education in the Ministry of Education, and division’s impact on the rate of youngsters who earn matriculation certificates and the number of Druze students attending higher education institutions. of the study analyzes the administrative separation of Druze education in the education system and its effect on the integration of Druze youngsters in higher education in Israel. The current study contributes to our understanding of the development of the Druze education system as a distinct unit in the Israeli Ministry of Education. The findings of this study and its conclusions will contribute to policymakers in the Ministry of Education in general, and policymakers concerning Druze education specifically, seeking to improve educational achievements and apply the insights of the current study to other minority groups to which higher education has become increasingly accessible in recent years.
    [Show full text]
  • Legitimizing Ariel University Further Marginalizes Palestinian Rights At
    Legitimizing Ariel University Further Marginalizes Palestinian Rights At a recent ceremony at Ariel University, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, science and technology minister Izhar Shay and US ambassador to Israel David Friedman signed amendments to earlier agreements between the US and Israel that regulate bilateral collaboration in science, technology and agriculture. The opening sentence of the US State Department’s official announcement of the amendments, signed on October 28, declares: “Today, the United States and Israel agreed to remove geographic restrictions” [emphasis added] on the earlier agreements, which date back to the 1970s. Henceforth, joint scientific and technological ventures will be allowed and funded in all territories under Israel’s jurisdiction – in particular, at Ariel University. The announcement includes portions of the American ambassador’s speech, in which he declared: “Upon entry of force of the [amendments] signed here in Judea and Samaria, more Israeli partners will be eligible to receive funding for scientific collaboration in a wide variety of fields. [They] will further strengthen our deep science and technology ties and help promote economic security for both our countries.” These seductive words hide an ugly reality. Nowhere mentioned in the announcement, or in the various speeches at the signing ceremony, is a recognition that Ariel University was built on land in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), in violation of international law forbidding an occupying power to resettle its population into the occupied land and dispossess the local population.i Palestinians are barred from entering the settlement of Ariel and its university.Ariel University was established by a decree of the Israeli Defence Forces in 1982 as the College of Judea and Samaria and was accorded university status in 2012.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel, Thus the Action Is Not a Discriminatory Act, but Is a Distinction That the State Is Permitted to Make
    In the Supreme Court sitting as the High Court of Justice HCJ 548/04 HCJ 670/04 HCJ 898/04 Before: The Honorable Justice D. Dorner The Honorable Justice A. Procaccia The Honorable Justice E. E. Levy The Petitioners in HCJ 548/04: 1. Amana – The Gush Emunim Settlement Movement 2. Binyamin Regional Council 1. Shomron Regional Council 2. Gush Etzion Regional Council 3. Har Hevron Regional Council The Petitioners in HCJ 670/04: 1. Yaakov Ichstein 2. Kiryat Arba Local Council The Petitioner in HCJ 898/04: Ofra Cooperative Village for Settlement Ltd. v e r s u s The Respondent in HCJ 548/04: Commander of IDF Forces in Judea and Samaria The Respondents in HCJ 670/04: 1. The Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon 2. The Defense Minister, Shaul Mofaz 3. The Commander of IDF Forces in Judea and Samaria, Maj. Gen. Moshe Kaplinsky The Respondent in HCJ 898/04: The Commander of IDF Forces in Judea and Samaria, Maj. Gen. Moshe Kaplinsky Petition for Order Nisi and Interlocutory Order Date of the session: 13 Shvat 5764 (5 February 2004) On behalf of Petitioners in HCJ 548/04: Attorney Yehuda Rasler On behalf of the Petitioners in HCJ 670/04: Attorney Nadav Haetzni; Attorney Orit Haim On behalf of the Petitioner in HCJ 898/04: Attorney David Rotem On behalf of the Respondents in HCJ 548/04, HCJ 670/04, and HCJ 898/04: Attorney Osnat Mandell J U D G M E N T Justice D. Dorner: In the three petitions before us, the petitioners challenge the validity of two orders issued by the commander of IDF forces in Judea and Samaria.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel's Possible Annexation of West Bank Areas: Frequently Asked
    Israel’s Possible Annexation of West Bank Areas: Frequently Asked Questions Updated July 14, 2020 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R46433 SUMMARY R46433 Israel’s Possible Annexation of West Bank July 14, 2020 Areas: Frequently Asked Questions Jim Zanotti Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has stated his intent for Israel to annex parts Specialist in Middle of the West Bank in 2020. Annexation could raise issues for Congress, and varying Eastern Affairs congressional views on the subject have contributed to debate about implications for U.S.-Israel relations. Congress may conduct additional oversight of Trump Administration actions and could modify or place conditions on U.S. funding for Israel, the Palestinians, and various international organizations. While the West Bank has been under Israeli military administration since its capture from Jordan in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, its status has been different from Israel proper (the territory Israel controlled before the war). Israel’s government has a mandate—based on the May 2020 power-sharing agreement between Netanyahu and Defense Minister Benny Gantz—to bring the matter of annexation to a cabinet and/or Knesset vote as early as July 1, 2020, provided that it is done in coordination with the United States. Palestinian leaders strongly oppose annexation, partly because it could undermine their hopes for a viable Palestinian state with territorial contiguity. Israeli annexation could thus have significant consequences for future U.S. efforts to secure a negotiated Israeli- Palestinian peace. In addition to the specific territorial and administrative impact of annexation, it could more broadly affect Palestinian national aspirations and the future of the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and Gaza, Israel’s efforts to reconcile its actions with its self-proclaimed identity as both a Jewish and a democratic state, and Israeli and Palestinian security concerns.
    [Show full text]
  • Ten Years with Netanyahu – Maintaining Israel, the Conflict
    INTERNATIONAL POLICY ANALYSIS Ten Years with Netanyahu Maintaining Israel, the Conflict – and Himself DAHLIA SCHEINDLIN January 2017 n Benjamin Netanyahu’s political success has been paved by the Israeli public’s per- ception of imminent existential destruction. Did his dichotomic worldview and his »fortress Israel« mentality create or merely leverage the public’s fears? n In the name of existential security, Netanyahu has justified the deterioration in the Palestinian-Israel conflict, which masquerades as stagnation. His fixation on Iran during two of his recent three terms as Prime Minister has distracted from a lack of policy on the local conflict. n Netanyahu has implemented a clear course of free market economics, which has generated some respectable macroeconomic indicators, but at the expense of mas- sive socio-economic gaps. n Since his re-election in 2015, Netanyahu has concentrated power and portfolios in his hands and has perpetuated earlier efforts to erode Israel’s civil society. He has targeted the press, his ideological opponents in the NGO sector, and Israel’s Arab-Palestinian minority. n In order to temper growing nationalism and democratic erosion, Israel should take genuine steps towards conflict resolution, place checks on unfettered free market principles, and end the aggression against independent civil society, opposition groups, and minorities. DAHLIA SCHEINDLIN | TEN YEARS WITH NETANYAHU Contents 1. Introduction ...........................................................3 2. Security and Foreign Policy: Searching
    [Show full text]
  • Occupied Palestinian Territory (Opt) Resulted in the Injury of 49 Palestinians, Including 10 Children
    Reporting period: 15 - 21 March 2016 Weekly Highlights Latest Developments (outside of the reporting period): On 24 March, two Palestinians stabbed and injured an Israeli soldier in Hebron city and were subsequently shot and killed by Israeli forces, according to initial media reports. On 23 March, the Israeli authorities destroyed 53 structures, including 22 homes, in the Area C community of Khirbet Tana (Nablus), on grounds of lack of building permits; this is the third such incident in this community since early February. The Israeli authorities have suspended the entry of Palestinian permit holders to East Jerusalem and Israel between 23-27 March due to a Jewish holiday, except for humanitarian cases and UN and INGO employees. Israeli forces killed four Palestinians, including a 17-year-old child, suspected perpetrators of three stabbing attacks, which resulted in the injury of two Israeli soldiers. The incidents took place in Hebron city, at the Gush Etzion junction (Hebron), and the entrance to Ariel settlement (Salfit). Since the beginning of 2016, Palestinian attacks and alleged attacks have resulted in the death of four Israelis, one foreign national and 45 Palestinians (all but one suspected perpetrators), including 13 children and three women.[1] Following one of the above attacks and through the end of the reporting period, Israeli forces blocked or deployed checkpoints at the main routes into the Beit Fajjar village (Bethlehem), where the suspected perpetrators lived; only humanitarian cases and teachers were allowed in and out following prior coordination. On 17 March, the Israeli authorities re-opened the main entrance to Beit Ur at Tahta village (Ramallah), which had been closed since 11 March, following a Palestinian attack, restoring normal access to five other villages to the city of Ramallah.
    [Show full text]
  • Imagining the Border
    A WAshington institute str Ategic r eport Imagining the Border Options for Resolving the Israeli-Palestinian Territorial Issue z David Makovsky with Sheli Chabon and Jennifer Logan A WAshington institute str Ategic r eport Imagining the Border Options for Resolving the Israeli-Palestinian Territorial Issue z David Makovsky with Sheli Chabon and Jennifer Logan All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. © 2011 The Washington Institute for Near East Policy Published in 2011 in the United States of America by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, 1828 L Street NW, Suite 1050, Washington, DC 20036. Design by Daniel Kohan, Sensical Design and Communication Front cover: President Barack Obama watches as Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas shake hands in New York, September 2009. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) Map CREDITS Israeli settlements in the Triangle Area and the West Bank: Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics, 2007, 2008, and 2009 data Palestinian communities in the West Bank: Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, 2007 data Jerusalem neighborhoods: Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies, 2008 data Various map elements (Green Line, No Man’s Land, Old City, Jerusalem municipal bounds, fences, roads): Dan Rothem, S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace Cartography: International Mapping Associates, Ellicott City, MD Contents About the Authors / v Acknowledgments / vii Settlements and Swaps: Envisioning an Israeli-Palestinian Border / 1 Three Land Swap Scenarios / 7 Maps 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Ngo Documents 2013-11-01 00:00:00 Financing the Israeli Occupation the Current Involvement Of
    Financing the Israeli Occupation The Current Involvement of Israeli Banks in Israeli Settlement Activity Flash Report November 2013 In October 2010, Who Profits published a report about the Israeli banks' involvement in the Israeli occupation. The Israeli banks provide the financial infrastructure for activities of companies, governmental agencies and individuals in the occupied Palestinian territories and the Syrian Golan Heights. Who Profits' research identified six categories in which Israeli banks are involved in the occupation: providing mortgage loans for homebuyers in settlements; providing financial services to settlements' local authorities; providing special loans for construction projects in settlements; operating branches in Israeli settlements; providing financial services to businesses in settlements; and benefiting from access to the Palestinian monetary market as a captured market. Additionally, as Who Profits' report shows, it is evident that the banks are well aware of the types and whereabouts of the activity that is being carried out with their financial assistance. Our new flash report reveals that all the Israeli banks are still heavily involved in financing Israeli settlements, providing services to settlements and financially supporting construction project on occupied land. Contents: Dexia Israel .......................................................................................................................................... 2 Hapoalim Bank ...................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]