ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook on Israeli Security provides an authoritative survey of both the historical roots of Israel’s national security concerns and their principal contemporary expressions. Following an introduction setting out its central themes, the Handbook comprises 27 independent chapters, all written by experts in their fields, several of whom possess first-hand diplomatic and/or military experience at senior levels. An especially noteworthy feature of this volume is the space allotted to analyses of the impact of security challenges not just on Israel’s diplomatic and military postures (nuclear as well as conventional) but also on its cultural life and societal behavior.

Specifically, it aims to fulfill three principal needs.

  • The first is to illustrate the dynamic nature of Israel's security concerns and the ways in which they have evolved in response to changes in the country's diplomatic and geo-strategic environment, changes that have been further fueled by technological, economic and demographic transformations;
  • Second, the book aims to examine how the evolving character of Israel's security challenges has generated multiple – and sometimes conflicting – interpretations of the very concept of "security", resulting in a series of dialogues both within Israeli society and between Israelis and their friends and allies abroad;
  • Finally, it also discusses how areas of private and public life elsewhere considered inherently "civilian" and unrelated to security, such as artistic and cultural institutions, nevertheless do mirror the broader legal, economic and cultural consequences of this Israeli preoccupation with national security.

This comprehensive and up-to-date collection of studies provides an authoritative and interdisciplinary guide to both the dynamism of Israel’s security dilemmas and to their multiple impacts on Israeli society. In addition to its insights and appeal for all people and countries forced to address the security issue in today’s world, this Handbook is a valuable resource for upper-level undergraduates and researchers with an interest in the Middle East and Israeli politics, international relations and security studies.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|38 pages

The Israeli security prism

chapter 1|12 pages

Free or fearful?

Zionism’s responses to Jewish insecurity

part II|98 pages

Debating security

chapter 4|14 pages

Neither Sparta nor Athens

Israeli public opinion on national security

chapter 6|13 pages

Settlements and security

A debate 1

chapter 7|12 pages

Keeping faith

Religious Jewish perspectives on Israeli security

chapter 8|11 pages

Israeli Arab perspectives on security

part III|76 pages

Framing security policy

part IV|60 pages

Pursuing security

chapter 18|13 pages

Israel’s security model

chapter 21|12 pages

Israel’s expanding strategic horizons

Finding extra-regional security partners

chapter 22|12 pages

Weapon of last resort?

The nuclear dimension

part V|60 pages

Augmenting security

chapter 23|12 pages

Building resilience

The public discourse

chapter 24|12 pages

The civilian home front

In search of societal resilience

chapter 27|11 pages

Jewish, democratic and resilient?

On competing visions of Israel