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Researcher at the Haifa Laboratory for Religious Studies and the Editor-in-
Chief of "Nexus" – A Review of Middle Eastern Religions and Politics.
She also serves as a research associate at the Weidenfeld Institute for Jewish
Studies, a Visiting Fellow at the University of South Wales, a lecturer at
Haifa University, Tel Aviv University, and "Shalem" College, and a
research fellow at JISS – Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security.
Pnina received her BA and MA, specializing in Strategy and National
Security, from the Political Science department at Bar Ilan University.
Dr. Pnina Shuker
Postdoctoral Fellow
Email: pninashu@gmail.com
Dr. Pnina Shuker
Researcher at the Haifa Laboratory for Religious Studies and the Editor-in-
Chief of "Nexus" – A Review of Middle Eastern Religions and Politics.
She also serves as a research associate at the Weidenfeld Institute for Jewish
Studies, a Visiting Fellow at the University of South Wales, a lecturer at
Haifa University, Tel Aviv University, and "Shalem" College, and a
research fellow at JISS – Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security.
She served as a Deputy Editor of the "Jerusalem Strategic Tribune," a journal
for strategic and diplomatic affairs; as a Neubauer Research Associate at
the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv (INSS); and as the
Director of International Programs at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle
Eastern and African Studies.
Director of International Programs at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle
Eastern and African Studies.
Pnina received her BA and MA, specializing in Strategy and National
Security, from the Political Science department at Bar Ilan University.
Her doctoral dissertation, also written at the Political Science Department of
Bar Ilan University, focuses on the perception of the democratic society as
sensitive to casualties and its impact on dealing with strategic threats
through comparative analysis between Britain, Israel, and the United States.
Bar Ilan University, focuses on the perception of the democratic society as
sensitive to casualties and its impact on dealing with strategic threats
through comparative analysis between Britain, Israel, and the United States.