The Proletarianization of Palestinians in Israel (ص 278)
غرض
- عنوان
- The Proletarianization of Palestinians in Israel (ص 278)
- المحتوى
- 
                        Ce tee
 279
 grants in 1974.° A Ministry of Labor Report states that 200,000 Israelis
 live in North America, more than half of them in the New York City area.
 Others estimate the number to exceed one-quarter of a million. The same re-
 port, covered in Yediot Aharonot (March 31, 1975), states that among these,
 only 12,000 are students and the rest are legal immigrants, either permanent
 residents or U.S. citizens with dual Israeli-American citizenship.
 The ethnic/national composition of the labor force has been already
 discussed but now we focus on those characteristics specifically related to,
 or affecting, differential locations in the employment structure, our con-
 cern in this essay. These may differ from the characteristics underlying
 their differential locations within the social division of labor. Accor-
 dingly, the Jewish labor force consists of:
 1. The early pioneering settlers (Vatikim) of European origin and
 their Israeli-born children (Sabras), who laid the foundation of Israel's
 social formation. They transplanted its settler economic base and political/
 ideological superstructure, including the revival of the Hebrew languages;
 they have, over time, acquired skill in operating and managing the State
 apparatus in administrative and clerical work, and are over-represented in
 the State bureaucracy. This segment of the labor force is also over-repre-
 sented in skilled labor categories in general and skilled manual categories
 in particular.? This is probably due to their seniority in the country and
 their long-term experience in small-scale artisan production (especially
 in traditional industries, to which they were accustomed in Diaspora, such
 as clothing and other finishing-level production [diamonds and metal pro-
 ducts]); this population group represents the larger portion of those who
 internalized and practiced the principles of Hebrew work and opposed hired
 labor. They represent the core of the Histadrut "labor" sector and the
- تاريخ
- ١٩٧٨
- المنشئ
- Najwa Hanna Makhoul
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