Dartmouth Dialogue Project Presents: Do Israelis & Palestinians Really Want Peace?

Dr. Dahlia Scheindlin is a public opinion expert who conducts research and policy analysis on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. With over twenty years of experience, she has advised nine national campaigns in Israel and worked in 15 other countries. 

This event will be recorded and livestreamed. Please click  here  to register for the webinar. 

Dr. Dahlia Scheindlin is a public opinion expert who conducts research and policy analysis on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. With over twenty years of experience, she has advised nine national campaigns in Israel and worked in 15 other countries. She is a co-founder at +972 Magazine, co-hosts The Tel Aviv Review podcast and writes regularly for Haaretz newspaper. Her work has appeared in the  New York Times , the  Washington Post Foreign Affairs Foreign Policy , the  New York Post Newsweek Time The Guardian Observer , among other venues. She is also a member of the Advisory Board of  Jewish Currents  magazine, and a fellow at The Century Foundation. Dr. Dahlia Scheindlin holds a PhD in political science from Tel Aviv University and she has taught at Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Tel Aviv University, the Jezreel Valley College, and Eastern Mediterranean University in Cyprus. Her new book,  The Crooked Timber of Democracy in Israel: Promise Unfulfilled,  was published in September 2023.

Dartmouth's interdisciplinary programs in Jewish Studies and Middle Eastern Studies have a longstanding commitment to fostering dialogue, community, and joint academic inquiry. Building on this decades-long partnership and recent campus forums on the current conflict, the Middle East Dialogues foster learning and an open exchange of ideas to bridge what can appear to be an impenetrable divide.

The Dialogue Project provides training in the development of essential collaborative dialogue skills—fostering a community that cultivates the respectful and open exchange of ideas. Programming for students, faculty, and staff builds skills in such topics as empathetic listening, managing emotions, navigating conversations, and finding points of connection. To learn more, visit  dialogueproject.dartmouth.edu .

Sponsored by Middle Eastern Studies, Jewish Studies, the Office of the Vice Provost for Academic Affairs, The Dickey Center for International Understanding, and the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Dartmouth

For more information, contact:

Jennifer Thomas

jennifer.m.thomas@dartmouth.edu

Permanent URL to this event:  https://dickey.dartmouth.edu/events/event?event=73033

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.

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