Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Jacqueline Goldberg, Social Identity in British and South African Jewry
2. Barry Kosmin, Religious Identity in the Social and Political Arena: An Examination of the Attitudes of Orthodox and Progressive Jews in the UK
3. Stephen Miller, Changing Patterns of Jewish Identity Among British Jews
4. Regine Azria, A Typological Approach to French Jewry
5. Lars Dencik, “Jewishness” in Post-Modernity: The Case of Sweden
6. Zvi Gitelman, Becoming Jewish in Russia and Ukraine
7. John Klier, The Jewish Press and Jewish Identity: Leningrad/St. Petersburg, 1989-1992
8. Malka Korazim and Esther Katz, Patterns of Jewish Identity in the Jewish Community of Moldova: The Behavioral Dimension
9. Judith Deutsch Kornblatt, Jewish Identity and the Orthodox Church in Late Soviet Russia
10. Alanna Cooper, Looking Out for One’s Own Identity: Central Asian Jews in the Wake of Communism
11. Andras Kovacs, Jewish Groups and Identity Strategies in Post-Communist Hungary
12. Marius Gudonis, Particularizing the Universal: New Polish Jewish Identities and a New Framework of Analysis
13. Claire Rosenson, Polish Jewish Institutions in Transition: Personalities Over Process
14. Charles Liebman, Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel
15. Jonathan Webber, Notes Towards the Definition of Jewish Culture in the New Europe
16. Charles Liebman, Jewish Identity in Transition: Transformation or Attenuation?