Moshe is a professor in the Department of German, Russian and East European Studies and the Department of Linguistics at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Andrei is a professor in the Department of Theology at Marquette University. His research interests are Jewish pseudepigrapha in Slavonic, Jewish and Christian apocalyptic literature, and early Jewish mysticism.
Anatoly is a professor at St. Petersburg State University. His research interests are textual criticism, history of Bible translations, and intercultural and interreligious contacts in the Middle Ages.
Judith is a professor in the Department of Philosophy at Georgetown University. Her research interests are ethics, political philosophy, and domestic and international justice.
Tsilly is a professor in the Faculty of Law at Bar-Ilan University. Her research interests are tax policy, international tax policy, international tax, globalization, and tax competition.
Michael is a professor in the School of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. His research interests are political theory and moral philosophy; political obligation; just and unjust war; nationalism and ethnicity; economics justice; and the welfare state.
Balakrishnan is a professor in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at MIT. His research interests are human rights and global justice, global redistribution, and ethics of development.
David is a professor at Georgetown University Law Center. His research interests are moral responsibility in organizational settings, international criminal law, issues of war and peace, and legal ethics.
Chaim is a professor in the Faculty of Law at Tel Aviv University. His research interests are legal theory, political philosophy, philosophical analysis of public affairs, and nationalism.
Eyal is a professor in the Faculty of Law at Tel Aviv University. His research interests are international law, constitutional law, and administrative law.
Yitzchak is a professor in the Faculty of Law and Department of Philosophy at Bar-Ilan University. His research interests are ethics, political philosophy, philosophy of language, and practical rationality.
Oron Shagrir is a Professor of Philospohy and Cognitive Science at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His areas of research include the conceptual foundations of (mainly computational) cognitive and brain sciences, the history and philosophy of computing and computability, and philosophy of mind.
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