Críticas:
"Carmel Chiswick does an excellent job in making accessible to a broad audience the concepts of household decision making on education, time allocation, occupational choice, and marriage to explain the observed patterns of economic behavior of Jewish families . . . [T]he book does an excellent job in using the lens of economic theory to shed light on the main educational, occupational, migration, and marital patterns among American Jews in the past and nowadays." -- Zvi Eckstein * Journal of Economic Literature * "Judaism in Transition is a richly informed and cogently written narrative of the American Jewish experience, focusing on the compromises that are necessary for life in modern society. The analysis is deeply informed by the author's professional identity as an economist and personal identity as a Jew." -- R. Stephen Warner * University of Illinois at Chicago * "Nobody but Carmel Chiswick could write this book. It has the mark of maturity and was obviously written by someone who has spent a lifetime thinking about economics and religion, and who has witnessed firsthand the changes that have taken place in the Jewish community over the years." -- Larry Iannaconne, Director, Center for the Economic Study of Religion * Chapman University * "Drawing on personal experience and scientific data, Chiswick suggests that the contemporary brand of American Judaism-to achieve the standard of American success-is molded by economic decisions that are often personal and deeply seated . . . This is an innovative and reader-friendly book . . . Recommended." -- Z. Garber * CHOICE * "Writing clearly, [Chiswick] divides her presentation into four parts: economic circumstances of American Jews; usefulness of economic concepts; economic decisions affecting American Jewish behavior; economic analysis and the American Jewish future . . . She offers other intriguing forecasts about American Judaism, concluding that we can be optimistic about its future. Her singular approach as an economist can be usefully applied to other American religious groups." -- Publisher's Weekly "With an open mind that presents a fresh look at the familiar, Carmel Chiswick analyzes the impact of the American economic context on Judaism in the 20th and 21st centuries. Her application of the concepts and methodology of economics to the study of religion will be startling and enlightening to social scientists and other students of religion." -- Rela Mintz Geffen, Professor of Sociology * Gratz College and President Emerita of the Baltimore Hebrew University * "Prof. Carmel Chiswick . . . uses the lens of economics to reveal the various constraints facing a religious minority in the United Sates and how this affects Jewish culture . . . [S]ome personal reflection on her own life growing up Jewish [gives] this academic topic a much more personal touch . . . [H]ighly readable book." -- Research on Religion "Combining her perspective as economist with her lifelong involvement in the American Jewish community, Professor Chiswick offers a singular analysis of the impact of economic forces on American Jewish life. This book is an important read for Jewish professionals, those concerned with the future of American Jewry, and readers seeking an introduction to the American Jewish community at the beginning of the 21st Century." -- Rabbi Allan Kensky * Beth Hillel Congregation Bnai Emunah and former Dean of the Jewish Theological Seminary * "In appealing and accessible language, Carmel Chiswick explains the economic drivers that influence our religious observance. While she writes from a Jewish perspective, adherents of all faiths will find much in this book that elucidates the impact economics has, and will continue to have, on our American faith communities." -- Emily Soloff, National Associate Director, Department of Interreligious and Intergroup Relations * American Jewish Committee * "Carmel Chiswick's new book offers a refreshing and innovative reading of the contemporary Jewish experience at a time of great confusion about its changing nature. Her original and rigorous method as an economist combines with the broad horizons of a humanist concerned with resilience and destiny of the Jewish people." -- Sergio DellaPergola * The Hebrew University of Jerusalem * "The book is clearly written for the scholar and the general reader." -- David Tesler * Association of Jewish Libraries Newsletter *
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