Avi Shlaim
Avi Shlaim | |
|---|---|
| אבי שליים أفي شلايم | |
Shlaim in 2015 | |
| Born | 31 October 1945 |
| Citizenship |
|
| Spouse |
Gwyneth Daniel (m. 1973) |
| Children | 1 |
| Awards | British Academy Medal (2017) |
| Academic background | |
| Education | |
| Thesis | The United States and the Berlin Blockade, 1948–1949: A Study in Crisis Decision Making (1980) |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Historian |
| School or tradition | Israel's "New Historians" |
| Institutions | |
Avi Shlaim FBA (Hebrew: אבי שליים, Arabic: أفي شلايم; born 31 October 1945) is an Israeli and British historian of Iraqi Jewish descent. He is one of Israel's "New Historians", a group of Israeli scholars who put forward critical interpretations of the history of Zionism and Israel.
Born in 1945, his family emigrated to Israel in 1951 during Operation Ezra and Nehemiah. He later moved to England in 1966 and studied and taught international relations at the University of Reading. He began studying the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in 1982 when 1948 Arab–Israeli War archives where unclassified by the Israeli government, he has an extensive bibliography and contributed to various newspapers and publishers.
Shlaim’s scholarship has been praised by historians and commentators, including Norman Finkelstein, Benny Morris and Anne Irfan, especially for his use of newly available sources and reinterpretation of Israeli history, Zionism and Palestine. Others like Yoav Gelber, Joseph Heller and Efraim Karsh say his conclusions reflect political bias that leads to flaws in his methodology and interpretation.