@misc{d93e5d547993441fa6973ce9977890d3,
title = "Anti-Jewish and Anti-Muslim Racisms and the Question of Palestine/Israel Online Paper Series Introduction",
keywords = "antisemitism, Islamophobia, Israel, Palestine, racism, anti-racism",
author = "Jamie Hakim and Nira Yuval-Davis",
note = "Nira Yuval-Davis is an Israeli diasporic Jew living in London. She is the Director of the Centre for Research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging at the University of East London and a Visiting Professor at the Centre for Gender Studies at the University of Umea, Sweden. She is a founder member of Women Against Fundamentalism and the International research network on Women in Militarized Conflict Zones. Her books include Woman-Nation-State (1989), Racialized Boundaries (1992), Women Against Fundamentalism: Stories of Dissent and Solidarity (1994), Unsettling Settler Societies (1995), Gender and Nation (1997), The Warning Signs of Fundamentalisms (2004) and The Politics of Belonging: Intersectional Contestations (2011). She is a partner in a EUF7 research programme on Borderscapes and is leading an international team working on Situated Intersectional Everyday Borderings. Jamie Hakim is research administrator at CMRB as well as a Lecturer in Media Studies at the University of East Anglia. His research interests lie at the intersection of affect theory, popular culture and politics. He was awarded his PhD by the University of East London in 2014. His thesis title was {\textquoteleft}Affect and Cultural Change: The Rise of Popular Zionism in the British Jewish Community after the “Six Day War” (June 1967){\textquoteright}, which looked at the role of affect in the British Jewish turn to Zionism after the 1967 war.",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
series = "Anti-Jewish and Anti-Muslim Racisms and the Question of Palestine/Israel",
publisher = "Centre for research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging",
type = "Other",
}