Faculty Publications

As of August 2017, this database is no longer being updated. For the most current publications from the faculty, students, and staff of Touro University, please check our institutional repository, Touro Scholar, and email any questions or publication submissions to touro.scholar@touro.edu.

Total number of publications: 7,082

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  • Abramson, H. (1991). Jewish representation in the independent Ukrainian governments of 1917-1920. Slavic Review, 50(3), 542-550. This material can be found here.

  • Abramson, H. (1994). Collective memory and collective identity: Jews, Rusyns, during the Holocaust. Carpatho-Rusyn American, 17(3), 8-12.

  • Abramson, H. (1994). The scattering of Amalek: A model for understanding the Ukrainian-Jewish conflict. East European Jewish Affairs, 24(1) 39-47. doi:10.1080/13501679408577763

  • Abramson, H. (1999). A prayer for the government: Ukrainians and Jews in revolutionary times, 1917-1920. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. This material can be found here.

  • Abramson, H. (1999). The prince in captivity. Reading hasidic discourses from the Warsaw Ghetto as sources for social and intellectual history. Journal of Genocide Research, 1(2), 213-225. doi:10.1080/14623529908413951

  • Abramson, H. (2003). Shouldering the burdens of history: Ukrainian-Jewish encounter since independence. In W. Isajiw (Ed.), Society in transition: Social change in Ukraine in western perspectives (pp. 203-212). Toronto, Canada: Canadian Scholars Press.

  • Abramson, H. (2003). "This is the way it was!" Textual and iconographic images of Jews in the Nazi-sponsored Ukrainian press of Distrikt Galizien. In R. M. Shapiro (Ed.), Why didn’t the press shout?: American and international journalism during the Holocaust (pp. 537-556). Jersey City, NJ: KTAV Publishing House. 

  • Abramson, H. (2003). Well – yes, a new historiographical synthesis! A response to Lars Fisher. Revolutionary Russia, 16(2), 94-100. doi:10.1080/09546540308575773

  • Abramson, H. (2007). Two Jews, three opinions: Politics in the Shtetl at the turn of the twentieth century. In S. T. Katz (Ed.), The Shtetl: New evaluations (pp. 85-101). New York, NY: New York University Press. 

  • Abramson, H. (2010). Holodomor and Holocaust. Holodomor Studies, 2(1), 131-136.

  • Abramson, H. (2011). Conclusion: Ukrainians, Jews and the Holocaust. Nationalities Papers, 39(3), 391-392. doi:10.1080/00905992.2011.570502

  • Aleksiun, N. (1997). Zionists and anti-zionists in the central committee of the Jews in Poland: Cooperation and political struggle, 1944-1950. Jews in Eastern Europe, 2(33), 32-50.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2001). Where was there a future for Polish Jewry? Bundist and Zionist polemics in post-World War II Poland. In J. Jacobs (Ed.), Jewish Politics in Eastern Europe: The Bund at 100 (pp. 227-242). New York: New York University Press.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2003). Jewish responses to antisemitism in Poland, 1944-1947. In J. Zimmerman (Ed.), Contested memories: Poles and Jews during the Holocaust and in its aftermath (pp. 247-261). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2004). Polish historiography of the Holocaust-Between silence and public debate. German History, 22(3), 406-432. doi:10.1093/0266355403gh316oa

  • Aleksiun, N. (2004). Polish Jewish historians before 1918: Configuring the liberal east European Jewish intelligentsia. East European Jewish Affairs, 34(2), 41-54. doi:10.1080/1350167052000340848

  • Aleksiun, N. (2004). The vicious circle: Jews in communist Poland, 1944-1956. In E. Mendelsohn (Ed.), Studies in Contemporary Jewry: Vol. 19. Jews and the state: Dangerous alliances and the perils of privileges of state (pp. 157-180). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2005). Rescuing a memory and constructing a history of Polish Jewry: Jews in Poland 1944-1950. Jews in Russia and Eastern Europe, 1(2), 5-27.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2005). The Polish Catholic church and the Jewish question in Poland, 1944-1948. Yad Vashem Studies, 33, 143-170. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2007). Polish historians respond to Jedwabne. In R. Cherry & A. Orla-Bukowska (Eds.), Rethinking Poles and Jews: Troubled past, brighter future (pp. 169-187). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. This material can be found here.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2007). The central Jewish historical commission in Poland, 1944-1947. In G. N. Finder, N. Aleksiun, A. Polonsky, & J. Schwarz (Eds.), POLIN (vol. 20). Oxford, England: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.

  • Aleksiun, N. (2011). Christian corpses for Christians! Dissecting the Anti-Semitism behind the cadaver affair of the Second Polish Republic. East European Politics & Societies 25(3), 393-409. doi:10.1177/0888325411398913

  • Aleksiun, N. (2013). As citizens and soldiers: Military rabbis in the Second Polish Republic. In D. Diner (Ed.), Simon Dubnow Institute yearbook 12 (pp. 221-242). Göttingen, Germany: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.

  • Aleksiun, N. (Ed.). (1998). The situation of the Jews in Poland: As seen by the Soviet security forces in 1945. Jews in Eastern Europe, 3(37), 52-68.

  • Anker, D. E., Lufkin, P. T., Rozinski, T. G., & The American Immigration Lawyers Association. (1994). The law of asylum in the United States: Administrative decisions and analysis. Washington, DC: American Immigration Lawyers Association.

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