In this talk, Dr Klug and Professor Lavi explore the following questions, among others: What useful role can definitions play in this controversy? Can the IHRA definition perform this role? Does the JDA give better guidance? Since October 7 2023, the war between Israel and Hamas in Gaza has led to public protests against Israel and
demands for an immediate ceasefire. In this connection, controversy over antisemitism on campuses across the
globe, including Oxford, has intensified. At the heart of the controversy is the definition of antisemitism published
by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA). The definition has been adopted by numerous
states and institutions, including Oxford University. The seminar will raise the following issues, among others:
What useful role can definitions play in this controversy? Can the IHRA definition perform this role? Is it, in
practice, used in a partisan way? Does the Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism (JDA) give better guidance?
More fundamentally, can a clear line be drawn between antisemitic and non-antisemitic critique of Israel, or is
there a deep ambiguity in the phenomenon itself?
Brian Klug, Shai Lavi, Eugene Rogan
Defining antisemitism: what is the point
Mouin Rabbani, Hasmik Egian, Eugene Rogan
Regional dimensions of the Gaza crisis, and the Arab role in the UN Security Council
Naghmeh Sohrabi, Maryam Alemzadeh
From the Cradle to the Street: Family and the 1979 Revolution in Iran
Amaney A. Jamal, Eugene Rogan
What Gazans Think Before and After October 7th
Heba El-Shazli, Maryam Alemzadeh
Reflections on Tunisian Women's Continued Fight for Respect, Dignity and Rights: Focus on Women in the Labour Movement
Amal W Nazzal, Maryam Alemzadeh
Webs of oppression’ in everyday organizing in Palestine: An Intersectional Feminist Analysis