Menu Expand
Immigrants and Bureaucrats

Immigrants and Bureaucrats

Esther Hertzog

(1999)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

Since Israel is primarily a country of immigrants, the state takes on the responsibility for the settlement and integration of each new group. It therefore sees its role as benevolent and indispensable to the welfare of the immigrants. This be true to some extent. However, the overwhelming effect, the author argues, is exactly the opposite: in her study of Ethiopian immigrants she reaches the conclusion that the absorption centers, which are central to Israeli immigration policy, present an extreme case of bureaucratic control over immigrants; they hinder rather than facilitate integration through the creation of power-dependence relations, with immigrants - whose lives and social structures are constantly interfered with by the officials - being cast as weak, defenseless and needy. They are reduced to helpless charges of these officials whose main goals are to expand and perpetuate their respective organizations and to consolidate their own positions within them. Thus the absorption centers, rather than furthering integration, create dependence on state control and social segregation.


"A very good book on the important topic of bureaucratic treatment of Ethiopian immigrants in Israel ... a tightly knit analysis."  · SHOFAR


Esther Hertzog was a social worker and school teacher before training as a Social Anthropologist. She is now Lecturer in Sociology and Anthropology at Beit Berl College.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Series Page ii
Immigrants and Bureacrats iii
Copyright Page iv
Dedication v
Table of Contents vii
Preface viii
Acknowledgements xi
List of Hebrew Terms and Israeli Organizations xiii
Maps xv
Introduction xvii
Chapter 1. The Center as a Dependent System 1
Chapter 2. Closure and Emergence of Power-Dependence Relations 29
Chapter 3. The Ethiopian Immigrants as a Social Category and Social Problem 68
Chapter 4. Social Closure and Power-Dependence Relationships at the Galuyot Absorption Center 102
Chapter 5. Categorizing Women 141
Chapter 6. The Role of Cultural Explanations in Gender-Based Relations 164
Conclusion 193
Select Bibliography 196
Index 201