The ideal of democratic socialist egalitarianism was put into practice by the kibbutz. These authors see it as the perfect laboratory for research on egalitarianism. Seeking an answer to the question, Can well planned democratic socialist egalitarian communities thrive economically, govern themselves effectively, and succeed in passing on their value system to successive generations?, The Second Generation presents extensive and systematic research conducted, between 1969 and 1976, by the Givat Haviva Institute for Social Research and the Research Institute of Ichud. Hakvutzot Vehakibbutzim (now part of TAKAM). This study addresses itself primarily to continuity and to a comparison of values and goals between founders and second generation Kibbutz members, while it sheds equal light on many other issues. Its extensive data and rich theoretical discussion will be a valuable resource for social and political scientists as well as moral philosophers.
This is a critical study of second generation kibbutz members, their status, personal aspirations, relationship to the kibbutz, their philosophy of life, and their attitude toward the first generation. The future of the kibbutz movement is dependent on answers to these questions--on whether or not the second generation is satisfied with its home. Fourteen essays ask such questions as: How does the second generation define itself in regard to national identity? What are their roles in effecting changes? Are they prepared to forego communal values for the sake of rapid economic progress? Did their kibbutz education prepare them to defend these values? This study's principal concern is to determine the factors that will predict if second generation kibbutz members will remain in their kibbutzim. The book concludes with a theoretical model for predicting attachments.
About the Author: MENACHEM ROSNER is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Haifa, Israel, and is currently the Chairman of the Israeli Sociological Society. He is a former Head and a senior researcher at the Institute for Research of the Kibbutz and the Cooperative Idea at the University of Haifa. He is currently working on a 1991 book for Greenwood Press entitled Alienation, Community, and Work. Rosner is a member of Kibbutz Reshafim.
ITZHAK BEN DAVID is a freelance researcher specializing in planning of development in peripheral areas and in social change in Israeli society. He is a former member of Kibbutz Gevim and currently lives in Korazim.
ALEXANDER AVNAT (deceased) was a senior researcher in the Institute for Research of the Kibbutz Artzi Federation. He was a member of Kibbutz Hatzor.
NENI COHEN is a senior researcher in the Institute for Research of the Kibbutz and the Cooperative Idea. He is an in-house scientific consultant to the Department of Social Affairs of the Kibbutz Artzi Federation. He is a member of Kibbutz Mizra.
URI LEVIATAN is a Professor of Sociology at the University of Haifa. He is a former head and a senior researcher in the Institute for Research of the Kibbutz and the Cooperative Idea at the University of Haifa. He is a member of Kibbutz Ein Hamifratz.