Sanctions can work…

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Hilary Rose and Steven Rose | Times Higher Education Supplement | 13 May 2005 The AUT boycott is part of a tradition of non-violent protest, argue Hilary Rose and Steven Rose Just 50 years ago, six years after the call from the African National Congress, 496 British academics published a letter advocating the boycott

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Education minister slams Haifa historian for supporting academic boycott

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Tamara Traubman | Haaretz | 13 May 2005 Education Minister Limor Livnat slammed Dr. Ilan Pappe, a Haifa University historian, on Thursday for supporting the academic boycott on Israel imposed by Britain’s Association of University Teachers (AUT). She said it is permissible to criticize, but not to undermine the Jewish state’s right to exist.

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Professors in Britain Vote to Boycott Two Israeli Schools

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) LIZETTE ALVAREZ | The New York Times | 8 May 2005 LONDON, May 7 – Acting in response to an appeal by 60 Palestinian organizations, Britain’s leading higher education union has voted to boycott two Israeli universities. The boycott, which has prompted outrage in Israel, the United States and Britain, would bar Israeli faculty

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From Ilan Pappe, to the Association of University Teachers in Britain

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Ilan Pappe | 7 May 2005 The AUT’s decision to reconsider its motions on the academic boycott of Israel seems to confuse procedure and principle. I am not a trade union activist, neither am I a British citizen, but I understand there may – or may not – have been procedural and even tactical errors

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Severe Inaccuracies in the (Haifa) University’s Response to the AUT Decision

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Dr. Yuval Yonai, lecturer in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology | Letter to Rector and Staff of Haifa University | April 2005 To Professor Ben-Arzi, University Rector Haifa University Staff Re: Severe Inaccuracies in the University’s Response to the AUT Decision Dear Ms. Whintman, I wish to protest on the many inaccuracies that have

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Store banned from importing books printed in Lebanon, Syria

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Ruth Sinai | Haaretz | 6 May 2005 The Ministry of Industry, Trade and Employment has prohibited a Haifa bookstore from importing books printed in Lebanon and Syria, counter to a policy followed for many years that permitted such imports. The head of the ministry’s Wood, Paper, and Print Department, Shmuel Nahmias, sent a

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WHY US? (On the academic boycott)

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Tanya Reinhart, translated from Hebrew by Mark Marshall. |Yediot Aharonot | 4 May 2005 A boycott decision, like that passed by Britain’s Association of University Teachers to boycott two Israeli universities, naturally raises a hue and cry among Israelis. Why us? And why now, ‘just when negotiations with the Palestinians might be renewed’? It

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It’s not a boycott of academics but pressure on Israel

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Interview with Nabil Kassis | Palestine Report, Volume 11 Number 43 | 27 April 2005 This week Palestine Report Online interviews Nabil Kassis, President of Birzeit University, on the boycott of two Israeli universities by the British Association of University Teachers (AUT). PR: Do you think the boycott initiated by the AUT is a

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Politicide, no less

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Jonathan Spyer | Haaretz | 22 April 2005 The British Association of University Teachers (AUT) is due today to debate the question of an academic boycott of Israeli universities. The motions to be discussed single out the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Haifa University and Bar-Ilan University for condemnation. In all three cases, specific grievances

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