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Семья, Родственники, Друзья И Их Роль В Формировании Еврейской Самоидентификации В Современной России
Translated Title:
Family, Relatives, Friends And Their Role In Forming Jewish Identity In Modern Russia
Author(s):
Носенко-Штейн, Елена
Editor(s):
Молчанова, B. B.
Date:
2012
Topics:
Main Topic: Identity and Community, Jewish Identity, Family and Household,
Friendship
Living local: some remarks on the creation of social groups of young Jews in present-day London
Author(s):
Kranz, Dani
Editor(s):
Gelbin, Cathy; Gilman, Sander L.
Date:
2014
Topics:
Ethnography, Social Media,
Friendship
, Youth, Main Topic: Other
Neighbourhood, community and residential change decisions in the Dublin Jewish community
Author(s):
Waterman, Stanley
Date:
1983
Topics:
Geography, Cities and Suburbs, Residential Patterns, Residential Mobility, Jewish Neighbourhoods,
Friendship
, Networks, Main Topic: Demography and Migration
Abstract:
The Dublin Jewish community has undergone numerical decline over the past thirty years. At the same time, there have been substantial changes in the residential locations of members of the community. This paper investigates the significance of the neighbourhood and the community in residential change decisions through an examination of social visiting patterns, friendship and family networks and the perception and importance of having Jewish neighbours. The results show that although contacts with non-Jewish neighbours have increased, there is still a tendency to choose residential locations close to other community members. While there is still a tendency to move to higher status suburbs in south-cast Dublin, there is an opposing trend back towards the area of second settlement in the south-west of the city.
A kortàrscsoport szerepe a magyarorszàgi zsidó fiatalok identitàsànak kialakulàsàban
Translated Title:
The role of the peer group in the development of identity of young Hungarian Jews
Author(s):
Gur, N.
Editor(s):
Kovács, M.; Erös, Ferenc; Kashti, Yitzak M.
Date:
1992
Topics:
Jewish Identity, Youth,
Friendship
, Main Topic: Identity and Community
"We are similar in that we're different": Social Relationships of Young Russian Jewish Immigrants in Israel and Germany
Author(s):
Schütze, Yvonne; Rapoport, Tamar
Editor(s):
Breckner, Roswitha; Kalekin-Fishman, Devorah; Miethe, Ingrid
Date:
2000
Topics:
Interviews, Russian-Speaking Jews, Immigration, Aliyah, Acculturation, Integration, Russian Emigration,
Friendship
, Main Topic: Other
Abstract:
The data used in this study was collected for the project titled 'Russian Jewish Immigration in Jerusalem and Berlin: A Comparison.' The project
focuses on the process of social integration of young Russian Jews who emigrated to Israel and Germany and had resided in the new society for roughly five to six years at the time of the interview (1995/1996). The interview subjects were 38 young Russian Jews in Jerusalem, whose mean age was 24 years, and 46 in Berlin, with a mean age of 22.6 years. The interviews in Israel were conducted exclusively with university students, while the Berlin group consisted of 35 university students and 11 individuals preparing to enter the university or other educational institutions. The central question of this study can be summarized as follows: Do the different approaches to Russian Jewish emigrants taken by Israel and Germany - approaches which are historically, politically, and culturally distinct - have diverging effects on the process of integration, and thus on the immigrants' future perspectives in the new society? In this paper, we have dealt only with a part of this question, namely social relations between emigrants and native residents.
Living local: some remarks on the creation of social groups of young Jews in present-day London
Author(s):
Kranz, Dani
Date:
2011
Topics:
Ethnography, Social Media,
Friendship
, Youth, Main Topic: Identity and Community
Abstract:
This article looks at the formation of social groups of young Jews in present-day London. In order to analyse the creation of these groups, the focus is on the level of voluntary grassroots groups, which allows for an in-depth analysis of the creation and maintenance of the groups, as well as an analysis of the membership. However, as important as who participated as a member of the groups is to understand, understanding which Jews did not participate in the groups is also important, as this gives an insight into the faultlines and cleavages of Jewish identities in the present. The findings indicate that young Jews in London gather along the lines of a shared inner-Jewish ethnic subgroup and within this subgroup with co-ethnics who share similar attitudes, values and motivations. Furthermore, the findings indicate that present-day London Jews live within a heavily nationalised if not localised framework, because the goals of the groups are mainly local with a few national features.