Bankier-Karp Adina L
Australian Centre for Jewish Civilisation, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Contemp Jew. 2023 Mar 20:1-29. doi: 10.1007/s12397-023-09477-y.
The subjects of Jewish identity and Jewish communal vitality, and how they may be conceptualized and measured, are the topics of lively debate among scholars of contemporary Jewry (DellaPergola 2015, 2020; Kosmin 2022; Pew Research Center 2021; Phillips 2022). Complicating matters, there appears to be a disconnect between the broadly accepted claim that comparative analysis yields richer understanding of Jewish communities (Cooperman 2016; Weinfeld 2020) and the reality that the preponderance of that research focuses on discrete communities. This paper examines the five largest English-speaking Jewish communities in the diaspora: the United States of America (US) (population 6,000,000), Canada (population 393,500), the United Kingdom (UK) (population 292,000), Australia (population 118,000), and South Africa (population 52,000) (DellaPergola 2022). A comparison of the five communities' levels of Jewish engagement, and the identification of factors shaping these differences, are the main objectives of this paper. The paper first outlines conceptual and methodological issues involved in the study of contemporary Jewry; hierarchical linear modeling is proposed as the suitable statistical approach for this analysis, and ethnocultural and religious capital are promoted as suitable measures for studying Jewish engagement. Secondly, a contextualizing historical and sociodemographic overview of the five communities is presented, highlighting attributes which the communities have in common, and those which differentiate them. Statistical methods are then utilized to develop measures of Jewish capital, and to identify explanatory factors shaping the differences between these five communities in these measures of Jewish capital. To further the research agenda of communal and transnational research, this paper concludes by identifying questions that are unique to the individual communities studied, with a brief exploration of subjects that Jewish communities often neglect to examine and are encouraged to consider. This paper demonstrates the merits of comparative analysis and highlights practical and conceptual implications for future Jewish communal research.
犹太身份认同和犹太社区活力的主题,以及如何对它们进行概念化和衡量,是当代犹太研究学者之间热烈辩论的话题(德拉佩尔戈拉,2015年、2020年;科斯明,2022年;皮尤研究中心,2021年;菲利普斯,2022年)。使事情复杂化的是,一方面人们广泛接受比较分析能更深入理解犹太社区这一观点(库珀曼,2016年;温费尔德,2020年),另一方面现实情况是该研究大多集中在离散的社区,这两者之间似乎存在脱节。本文考察了散居在外的五个最大的英语犹太社区:美利坚合众国(美国)(人口600万)、加拿大(人口39.35万)、英国(人口29.2万)、澳大利亚(人口11.8万)和南非(人口5.2万)(德拉佩尔戈拉,2022年)。比较这五个社区的犹太参与程度,并确定形成这些差异的因素,是本文的主要目标。本文首先概述当代犹太研究中涉及的概念和方法问题;提出分层线性模型作为适合此分析的统计方法,并提倡将民族文化和宗教资本作为研究犹太参与度的合适指标。其次,对这五个社区进行了情境化的历史和社会人口概述,突出了它们的共同属性以及各自的差异。然后运用统计方法来制定犹太资本的衡量指标,并确定在这些犹太资本衡量指标中形成这五个社区差异的解释性因素。为推动社区和跨国研究的议程,本文最后确定了所研究的各个社区特有的问题,并简要探讨了犹太社区常常忽略但应予以考虑的主题。本文展示了比较分析的优点,并突出了对未来犹太社区研究的实际和概念影响。