The Challenges of Defining Israel as a Jewish and Democratic State from a Constitutional Law Perspective Flashcards
What does it mean for Israel to be a democratic state?
Open and honest elections, popular sovereignty; separation of powers; independent judiciary and judicial review; civil liberties; and transparency and free media.
What is the Jewish character of the State of Israel?
Israel is a nation-state; it is the state whereby the Jewish people exercises its collective right to self-determination. Law of Return. Special ties with Jewish communities in the Diaspora. Public sphere is shaped by Jewish collective identity and memory: Hebrew language; calendar; days of rest and public holidays; Israeli flag (Star of David); Menorah.
Why is the Jewish character of the State of Israel problematic?
Arab minority — no identification with Jewish collective history and memory; economic discrimination in many realms; limited access to effective political participation; treated with suspicion by Jewish majority.
What are some areas where religion and state overlap in Israel?
Rabbinical monopoly on matters of personal status; Kashrut certification; holy sites (Western Wall); gender-based segregation in public sphere; public transportation and business activity on Shabbat; conversion; refusal of Ultra-Orthodox Jews to serve in military and adopt national education curriculum; refusal of national-religious Jews to accept the democratic vote in the event of withdrawal from West Bank and dismantling of settlements.
Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People.
Israel is the historic homeland of the Jewish people, Jerusalem is the capital, Hebrew is the official language with Arabic having special status, ingathering of exiles, Jewish settlement, Jewish holidays, and Independence Day.
Why did some members oppose the proposal of Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People?
The idea of enacting such a Basic Law first emerged as a counter-reaction to proposals made by some Arab-Israeli activists and ministers demanding an end to the Jewish state in favour of a purely civic democracy — a “state of all its citizens” — based on an American or Canadian model.
Why did Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insist that the Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People was necessary?
Because mounting worldwide challenges deny that Israel is the national homeland of the Jewish people.
Who was tasked with dealing solely with the Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People to put together a draft that was deemed acceptable to all members of the coalition?
Amir Ohana of the Likud.
What was the response to Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People?
Fierce opposition and mass demonstrations. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear petitions against it with a panel of 11 judges.
True or false? The final version of the Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People includes provisions that constitutionalizes the status of Jewish law in the Israeli legal system, and making specific mention of the chief rabbinate.
False.
True or false? The Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People provides the State of Israel will work to preserve the cultural and historical heritage of the Jewish Nation and foster it in Israel.
False.
How does the Constitutional Revolution support the creation of the Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People?
Since the High Court of Justice subordinates national Jewish interests to universalist ones, the Basic Law is needed to constitutionally anchor the Jewish collective right to a nation-state and compel the High Court of Justice to take the state’s Jewish character into greater consideration when making legal decisions and so cease downplaying the collective right of the Jews to a nation-state that reflects Jewish preferences.
How do the fundamental principles of Zionism support the Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People?
The Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People provides the minimal framework in which the majority of citizens already committed to a form of Jewish identity are able to manifest that collective identity in the public sphere — gives constitutional force to the fundamental principles of Zionism.
How would proponents argue that the Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People does not diminish minority rights?
All citizens would continue to be entitled to equal treatment under law with full civil rights, but these are political and, in part, social in nature, not collective. Israel is the one and only state actualizing the collective rights of the Jewish people to self-determination.
How does Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People diminish minority rights?
One who does not identify with the Jewish people feels less connected. As a citizen in a democratic nation state, the minority member receives equal political and social rights; however, as a non-member of the nation he does not bask in the same feeling of fellowship and belonging that accompanies the self-determination of the overwhelming majority.