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List of all scholars | Israel Institute for Advanced Studies

List of all scholars

ed breuer

Edward Breuer

INDIVIDUAL FELLOW
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

 

fellow

Moshe Coll

FELLOW
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

 

 

 

Rakefet Ackerman

Rakefet Ackerman
Rakefet
Ackerman
FELLOW
Technion

Prof. Ackerman’s research is based on the metacognitive approach, by which subjective assessment of knowledge guides the activities people perform for achieving their goals. Understanding the factors that affect the reliability of this subjective knowledge assessment and the cases that are particularly prone to biases offers a foundation for developing effective work environments and techniques. In her recent research, she deals with the metacognitive processes underlying the regulation of mental effort while facing reasoning and problem-solving challenges, by combining cognitive-psychology experiments and real-life challenges.

Personal Website

Yael Allweil

Yael Allweil
Yael
Allweil
FELLOW
Technion Institute of Technology

 

Architect Dr. Yael Allweil is an architectural historian and faculty member at the Faculty of Architecture and Town Planning, Technion Iinstitute of Technology.
Her research focus involves the history of housing in Israel and Palestine, and the history of struggles over urban public spaces.
2019-2020 Organizer Re-theorizing the Architecture of Housing as Grounds for Research and Practice
Read more about Dr. Allweil here

Cameron Andrew

Andrew Cameron
Cameron
Andrew
FELLOW
University of St. Andrews

 

Andrew Cameron is Professor of Astronomy at St Andrews. His research is in stellar magnetic fields and the discovery and characterisation of extrasolar planets. He is a founding Co-I of the WASP collaboration, which has discovered more than 170 gas-giant planets in close orbits about their host stars. He is also a member of the Science Team for the Swiss-led ESA S-class CHaracterising ExOPlanets Satellite (CHEOPS; launch expected 2019), for which he leads the Working Group on data analysis.

2018-2019 Fellow: Big Data and Planets

Read more about Professor Cameron here

Bernard Arps

Bernard Arps
Bernard
Arps
FELLOW
Leiden University

 

Bernard Arps is a professor of Indonesian and Javanese Language and Culture at the Leiden University Institute for Area Studies. His research centres on Indonesia and the Malay world, with a core interest in Java and its diasporas. He teaches about Southeast Asia. He has particular interests in the theory and methods of philology (conceived as the artefact-focused study of worldmaking); the theory and methods of Area Studies; narrativity in culture; Islam; audio media and audioscapes; and the relevance of the past in and for the present.

2018-2019: IIAS Fellow in  Research Group New Directions in the Study of Javanese Literature

Read more about Professor Arps here

Nir Avieli

fellow
Nir
Avieli
FELLOW
Ben-Gurion University

 

 

Prof. Nir Avieli is a cultural anthropologist. Avieli has been conducting ethnographic research in Vietnam since the late 1990’s, focusing on food and foodways. Within the research group he will expand the scope of his research on animals in contemporary Vietnamese society in several directions. He will further explore the social categorization of the edible and inedible in Vietnam and the social and cultural contexts that allow and even enhance transgression of prohibitions and taboos relating to animal meat, emphasizing the role played by age and gender in such processes and contexts. He will study the changing cultural meanings and social positions of water buffaloes, a central pillar of traditional Vietnamese farming and farming society, vis-a-vis agricultural modernization. He will explore the changing trends regarding animals in the domestic sphere in contemporary Vietnam and the shift from “decorative animals” (such golden fish and songbirds) to pets, mainly dogs and cats. He will also investigate continuity and change in rituals that involve dragons and unicorns, mythical animals that materialize in various ways in contemporary ritual.

 

Gideon Avni

gideon avni
Gideon
Avni
FELLOW
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Group Organizer
Archaeology
Israel Antiquities Authority


Areas of Research


Classical, Late Antique, Early
Islamic and Medieval archaeology,
the archaeology of Jerusalem,
nomads and sedentary societies in
the desert areas of the Near East,
Mediterranean connectivity in
Late Antiquity and Early Islamic times,
and the diffusion of technologies and
movement of people in
Eurasia.

Chloe Balla

chloi balla
Chloe
Balla
FELLOW
University of Crete

 

Prof. Chloe Balla is Associate Professor and the Director of the Laboratory of Philosophical Research and Translation at the University of Crete. She is a Plato scholar with a special interest in Plato’s criticism of the sophists and his representation of Socrates, and is currently working on a monograph of Plato’s Phaedo (working title: Only reason left alive: Plato’s Phaedo as an exhortation to philosophy). 

Read more about Professor Balla here.

Michal Barzuza

michal
Michal
Barzuza
FELLOW
University of Virginia

Professor Michal Barzuza researches and teaches corporate law, corporate governance, corporate finance, regulatory competition and law and economics. Her scholarship studies the optimal balance between regulation and laissez-faire in corporate law, focusing on issues such as the effects of interstate competition on the shape of corporate law, firm heterogeneity and the choice of corporate governance terms, cross-listing, boardroom dynamics, outside directors and the general counsel, and firms with controlling shareholders.

Read more about Prof. Michal Barzuza here.

David Bello

david bello
David
Bello
FELLOW
Washington and Lee University

Prof. Bello's research focuses on the Qing Empire as a Human-Animal Construct. The Qing dynasty (1644-1912) governed a variety of ecologies and cultures across East Asia, Inner Asia and Southeast Asia. This required Qing environmental orchestration of human relations with livestock and game in Inner Asia, with insect herbivore predators and agricultural domesticates in East Asia and with insect disease vectors in Southeast Asia, to name only the major categories.

Read more about Prof. Bello here.

Jay Berkowitz

Jay Berkovitz
Jay
Berkowitz
FELLOW
University of Massachusetts

 

Jay Berkovitz is Professor and Chair of Judaic and Near Eastern Studies.His research and teaching focus is on the early modern history of European Jews, with special emphasis on Jewish law, family, ritual, and communal governance. A member of the Academic Advisory Council of the Center for Jewish History and of the Academic Advisory Committee of the Rothberg International School of the Hebrew University, he currently serves as joint editor-in-chief of the academic journal Jewish History.

2018-2019 Organizer: Rethinking Early Modern Jewish Legal Culture

Read more about Professor Berkovitz here

Michal Biran

michal biran
Michal
Biran
FELLOW
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Prof. Michal Biran (PhD HUJI 2000) is a historian of Inner Asia and a member of the Israeli Academy of Science and Humanities. She is the Max and Sophie Mydans Foundation Professor in the Humanities, teaches at the departments of Asian Studies and Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, and is currently (2015) the director of the Louis Frieberg Center for East Asian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she also leads the ERC-funded project “Mobility, Empire and Cross-Cultural Contacts in Mongol Eurasia.” (http://mongol.huji.ac.il/). Together with Hodong Kim she is now editing The Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire (2 volumes) for Cambridge University Press. She has published extensively on Mongol and PreMongol Central Asia (10th-14th centuries); the Mongol Empire; nomadism; and cross-cultural contacts between China and the Islamic world. Her books include Qaidu and the Rise of the Independent Mongol State in Central Asia (Curzon, 1997), The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History: Between China and the Islamic World (Cambridge University Press, 2005, 2008) and Chinggis Khan (Oxford: OneWorld Publications, 2007). She has co-edited Mongols, Turks and Others: Eurasian Nomads and the Sedentary World (with Reuven Amitai, Leiden: Brill, 2005) and Nomads As Agents of Cultural Change (with Reuven Amitai, Hawaii University Press, 2015).

Read More About Prof. Biran Here.

Els Bogaerts

Els Bogaerts
Els
Bogaerts
FELLOW
Independent Scholar


Els Bogaerts is an experienced lecturer and researcher, and coordinator of academic programmes on Indonesian culture. She performs classical Javanese dance, and has given talks on Indonesian performing arts at the main fora in the Netherlands.

2018-2019 Fellow: New Directions in the Study of Javanese Literature

Read more about Ms Bogaerts here
 

Mark A. Bradford

poster
Mark A.
Bradford
FELLOW
Yale University

Mark A. Bradford is a Professor of Terrestrial Ecosystem Ecology in the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University. His research focuses on how global change (e.g. climate warming) affects plants, animals, and microorganisms in grasslands and forests, and especially their consequences for ecosystem carbon cycling and storage. He studies these aspects using field experiments, field observations, and laboratory studies across ecosystems along the eastern United States.

Marc Brettler

Marc Brettler
Marc
Brettler
INDIVIDUAL FELLOW
Duke University

 

Marc Brettler is the Bernice and Morton Lerner Professor of Judaic Studies at Duke University, and Dora Golding Professor of Biblical Studies emeritus at Brandeis University. His research centers on several areas: the use of religious metaphors in the Hebrew Bible (God is King: Understanding an Israelite Metaphor, 1989), the nature of biblical historical texts as "literary" texts (The Creation of History in Ancient Israel, 1995; The Book of Judges, 2002), and gender and the Bible. He co-edited The Jewish Annotated New Testament (2011) and The New Oxford Annotated Bible (2001, revised 2010), co-authored The Bible and the Believer (2012; paperback 2015), wrote Biblical Hebrew for Students of Modern Hebrew (2002) and co-edited The Jewish Study Bible (2004; second edition 2014), which was awarded a National Jewish Book Award. How to Read the Bible was published by the Jewish Publication Society in fall 2005, and in paperback as How to Read the Jewish Bible by Oxford University Press in 2007. His articles may be found at https://duke.academia.edu/MarcBrettler.

Edward Breuer

ed breuer
Edward
Breuer
INDIVIDUAL FELLOW
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

 

Prof. Edward Breuer is a native of Montreal Canada and received his Ph.D. from Harvard; he currently teaches at the Hebrew University. Breuer writes about the history of biblical scholarship in the modern era, and is the co-author with Chanan Gafni of “Jewish Biblical Scholarship between Tradition and Innovation” and, with David Sorkin, Moses Mendelssohn's Hebrew Writings (Yale, 2018).

Gaia Caramellino

Gaia Caramellino
Gaia
Caramellino
FELLOW
Politecnico di Milano

Gaia Caramellino is Assistant Professor in History of Architecture at the Department of Architecture and Urban Studies (DAStU) of the Politecnico di Milano, where she teaches History and Theory of 20th century Architecture.Her research interests focus on the circulation of urban and architectural models and discourses between Europe and the Americas; the history of housing cultures, policies, forms and practices over the 20th century; the methodology in the historical research on housing; 20th century architectural periodicals.

2019-2020 Organizer: Re-theorizing the Architecture of Housing as Grounds for Research and Practice

Read more about Professor Caramellino here

Olga Chernyakhovskaya

Olga Chernyakhovskaya
Olga
Chernyakhovskaya
FELLOW
Otto-Friedrich Universität Bamberg

Dr. Olga Chernyakhovskaya is a recent PhD recipient and has already established a name for herself as a leading researcher of Socratic literature. Her book "Socrates bei Xenophon" offers a comprehensive philological and philosophical analysis of Xenophon's Socratic writings. In addition to the book, she has written numerous articles on various aspects of Socratic philosophy. She comes to Xenophon with a strong background in Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy, which is a rarity among contemporary scholars.

Read more about Professor Chernyakhovskaya here.