Hebraic Political Studies Explained

Hebraic Political Studies
Cover:Hebraic Political Studies3.jpg
Discipline:Political history
Editor:Gordon Schochet, Arthur Eyffinger
Website:http://www.hpstudies.org/20/aboutus.asp
Link1:http://www.hpstudies.org/20/Issue.aspx
Link1-Name:Online access
Publisher:Shalem Press
Country:Israel
Abbreviation:Hebr. Political Stud.
History:2005-2009
Openaccess:Yes
Frequency:Quarterly
Issn:1565-6640
Oclc:61480010

Hebraic Political Studies was a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Shalem Press, funded by the Shalem Center,[1] and devoted to recovering the Hebraic political tradition and evaluating its place in the history of political thought.

History

According to Carlin Romano, the Journal emerged from a 2004 conference on Jewish Sources in Early Modern Political Thought held at Jerusalem's Mishkenot Sha'ananim convention center.[2]

In 2004, the Shalem Center announced a call for papers for a conference on political Hebraism and, according to Gordon Schochet (Rutgers University), "the enthusiastic response convinced us there was a need for a journal."[1] The journal was established in 2005 with Schochet and Arthur Eyffinger (Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands) as editors-in-chief. The journal was devoted to the recovery and exploration of the Hebraic political tradition, that is, the uses of biblical, Talmudic, rabbinic, and other Jewish and Judaic sources by Christian and Muslim as well as Jewish authors in the history of political thought.

The journal's last issue appeared Fall 2009, and its website states that it is no longer accepting submissions.[3]

Reception

Allan Arkush (Binghamton University) compared the journal with the other Shalem Center publication "Azure", which, Arkush argued, was seen by many as a "neoconservative" political magazine. Despite different editorship and stated goals, the two magazines shared many characteristics, with both sharing characteristics of the reputation of each. In the end, Arkush argues,

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed[4] in:

Notes and References

  1. http://www.thejewishweek.com/arts/books/did_hebrew_bible_give_birth_democracy_0 Did The Hebrew Bible Give Birth To Democracy?
  2. News: Romano . Carlin . Who Took the 'Judeo' Out of 'Judeo-Christian'? . 3 October 2018 . . 26 January 2007.
  3. Web site: Hebraic Political Studies . Shalem Press . 2009 . 2013-05-09.
  4. http://miar.ub.edu/issn/1565-6640 Information Matrix for the Analysis of Journal