
Published: 6 months ago
Size: 24.6MB
The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, by Naomi Klein
Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine in the Israeli Context
On Thursday,
the 26th of June, 2008, Shir Hever, economist with the Alternative Information
Center (AIC) spoke with
Canadian journalist, author and activist, Naomi Klein. Naomi is the author of No
Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies and Fences and Windows: Dispatches
from the Front Lines of the Globalization Debate and a frequent contributor
to The Nation, In These Times, The Globe and Mail, and The Guardian.
Her most
recent work is, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism
(September 2007). In this book, she undertakes to show how “disaster
capitalism,” which she defines as “orchestrated raids on the public sphere in
the wake of catastrophic events, combined with the treatment of disasters as
exciting market opportunities,” did not begin in the wake of September 11,
2001. Instead, its origins can be traced back fifty years, to the University of Chicago
under Milton Friedman, which produced many of the leading neoconservative and
neoliberal thinkers, whose influence is still profound in Washington today.
Shir spoke
with Naomi about Israel’s
role in the disaster capitalism phenomenon, the contradictions in Israeli
society, which both profits and suffers from the burdens of being a fortress
state in constant conflict, and on the discourse among Israeli economists about
the role of peace vs. war in the Israeli economy.

Published: 6 months ago
Size: 36.5MB
On 16 June, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni was in Luxembourg for a meeting of meeting of the EU-Israel Association Council, during which the EU voted unanimously to upgrade its relationship with Israel.
Implications of the European Union's Decision to Upgrade its Relationship With Israel
On Thursday, the 19th of June, 2008, we spoke with Professor Yossi Schwartz in the offices of the Alternative Information Center (AIC) in West Jerusalem. Yossi, a professor of history at Tel Aviv University, is founder and current chairperson of the Israeli human rights organization, Hamoked: Center for the Defense of the Individual. He is also co-chairperson on the board of directors of the AIC.
We discussed the wider implications of the European Union’s decision to upgrade its political and economic relationship with Israel.

Published: 7 months ago
Size: 40.3MB
Gilbert Achcar
News from Within Podcast: American, Israeli and Iranian Strategies in the Middle East Conflict
On 29 May,
2008, Michael Warschawski, co-founder of the Alternative
Information Center,
spoke with Gilbert Achcar at his office in London, England.
Gilbert lived in Lebanon for
many years before moving to France,
where he taught politics and international relations at the University of Paris.
Since 2007, he has been a professor of Development Studies and International
Relations at the School of Oriental and African Studies of the University of London.
He is the author of many books, including, The Clash of Barbarisms: The
Making of the New World Disorder, Eastern Cauldron: Islam,
Afghanistan, Palestine, and Iraq
in a Marxist Mirror and The 33-Day War: Israel's
War on Hezbollah in Lebanon
and Its Consequences, which he co-wrote with Michael Warschawski.
During this
conversation, Achcar and Warschawski discussed the current situation in Lebanon, Iran’s
involvement in Iraq and its
relations with Syria and the
Hezbollah, US foreign policy
in the region in the context of the upcoming presidential elections, and the
possibility of American and Israeli military strikes on Lebanon or Iran.

Published: 7 months ago
Size: 56.4MB
Akiva Orr has been writing on the issue of the relation between Zionism and the search for a secular Jewish identity for many years, including the book Israel: Politics, Myths and Identity Crises, published in English by Pluto Press in 1994.
News from Within Podcast: Zionism as an Attempt to Solve the Jewish Identity Complex of Secular Jews
On Monday, the 26th of May, 2008, Akiva Orr spoke at the
offices of the Alternative Information Center in West Jerusalem. Akiva was born
in Berlin in 1931 and immigrated to Palestine with his family in 1934, growing
up in Tel Aviv. He served in the Israeli Navy in 1948 and after the war studied
mathematics and physics at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. In the early
1950s, Akiva became critical of Zionism, joining the Israeli Communist Party in
1953. However, in 1962, he broke from the party and jointly founded the
anti-Zionist Israeli organization Matzpen. He has written several books
including “The Un-Jewish State: The
Politics of Jewish Identity in Israel,” “The Other Israel: The Radical Case
Against Zionism,” and the “Direct Democracy Manifesto.” You can read and download
his books on his website at akiorrbooks.org (http://www.akiorrbooks.org/).

Published: 8 months ago
Size: 32.2MB
On 21 April in Jerusalem, former US President Jimmy Carter delivers a speech during a meeting held by the Israeli Council of Foreign Relations.
News from Within Podcast: A Palestinian Perspective on Carter's Visit and the Prospects of an Israeli/Palestinian Ceasefire
On
Monday the 28th of April, 2008, I spoke with Nassar Ibrahim in the
offices of the Alternative Information Center in Beit Sahour. Nassar, a longtime Palestinian writer,
journalist and activist, is Policy Director of the AIC. We discussed the
implications of the recent visit of former US President Jimmy Carter to the Middle
East, the possibility of a long-term ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, the context
of recent US and Israeli diplomatic maneuvers in the region, and Palestinian
plans for events to commemorate 60 years since the Nakba.