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2009-2010 | Israel Institute for Advanced Studies

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2009-2010

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Ron Siegel

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Northwestern University
Ron is a professor in the Department of Economics at Northwestern University. His research interests are microeconomic theory, applied microeconomic theory, and game theory.
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Simon Gaechter

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University of Nottingham
Simon is a professor in the School of Economics at the University of Nottingham.
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Ido Erev

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Technion
Ido is a professor in Industrial Engineering and Management at Technion - Israel Insitute of Technology. His research interests are the economics of small decisions and quantitative predictions of behaviour.
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Giorgio Coricelli

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CNRS
Giorgio is a professor in the Centre de neorosciences cognitives (CNC) at CNRS, France. His research interests are: human behaviours emerging from the interplay of cognitive and emotional systems; the role of emotions in decision making; and the relational complexity in social interaction.
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Gary Bornstein

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The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Gary is a professor in the Department of Psychology at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research interests are: intergroup conflict; games that incorporate intragroup and intergroup levels of conflict; and experimental paradigms for studying individual and group behaviour in the laboratory.
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Itzhak Aharon

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IDC Herzliya/ The Hebrew University
Itzhak is a professor at IDC Herzliya and in the Center for Rationality at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research interests are the neurobiology of motivation and decision making.
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Brouria Bitton-Ashkelony

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The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Brouria Bitton-Ashkelony is Associate Professor in the Department of Comparative Religion at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Ancient Arabia (from 1st Millennium BCE to the Emergence of Islam) and its Relations with the Surrounding Cultures

[RG # 118] Ancient Arabia (from the 1st Millennium BCE to the Emergence of Islam) and its Relations with the Surrounding Cultures

September 1, 2009 - July 31, 2010

Organizers:

Joseph Patrich (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Michael Lecker (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

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Arabia (the Arabian Peninsula) may no longer be terra incognita, but many aspects of its history remain unknown. The study of the history and culture of this territory is still in its infancy. One of the difficulties in properly evaluating the historical evidence about the ancient Near East is that modern Europeans or westerners approaching it inevitably do it with a host of confused and half-formed preconceptions about the "Orient", as Fergus Millar has noted in his book The Roman Near East 31 BC - AD 337.

In the last three decades an ever growing amount of new archaeological data, including a wealth of new inscriptions in many languages and scripts (Akkadian, Aramaic, Nabataean and South Arabian) has been gathered from sites in Saudi Arabia, the Yemen, the Persian Gulf, Sinai, the Negev, Jordan and Syria, as well as from sites of the cultures bordering with Arabia. Moreover, many texts in classical Arabic are now more accessible than ever before through various electronic media.

The group will evaluate the state of our knowledge about Arabia and the prospects for future research.

 

 

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