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Amit Schejter

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Name
  
Amit Schejter


Amit Schejter commpsuedumemberphotosSCHEJTERAMITjpg

Books
  
Muting Israeli Democracy: How Media and Cultural Policy Undermine Free Expression

Education
  
Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rutgers University

Amit Schejter is Professor and Head of the Communication Studies department at Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Israel and Visiting Professor of Communications and co-director of the Institute for Information Policy at the College of Communications of Pennsylvania State University.

Contents

Havana tel aviv credit amit schejter


Academic career

Schejter received his LL.B. from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1986, his M.S. in mass communications from Boston University in 1991 and his Ph.D. in communication and information policy from Rutgers in 1995. In 1997 he joined the faculty at Tel Aviv University. Since 2004 he has been at Penn State and since 2012 at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.[1]

Professional career

Between 1988-89 and 1992-93 Schejter served as bureau chief and senior advisor to Israeli ministers of education and culture Yitzhak Navon and Shulamit Aloni. Between 1993 and 1997 he was director of legal affairs and international relations at the Israel Broadcasting Authority and co-author of the Nakdi Report. In 2000 he was appointed vice president for regulatory affairs at Cellcom (Israel), where he attracted public attention when attacking the government's caving in to pressures of Bezeq, the national telco, refusing to undergo a polygraph test enforced on the corporation's senior management; and considering the new Channel 10's offer to serve as legal commentator.

In 2015 he headed a government panel that proposed sweeping changes to the Israeli media industry.[2]

Books

  • The Wonder Phone in the Land of Miracles: Mobile Telephony in Israel (Hampton Press, 2008) (with Akiba Cohen and Dafna Lemish)
  • Muting Israeli Democracy: How Media and Cultural Policy Undermine Freedom of Expression (University of Illinois Press, 2009)
  • ... And Communications for All: A Policy Agenda for a New Administration (Lexington Books, 2009)[3]
  • Beyond Broadband Access: Developing Data-Based Information Policy Strategies (Fordham University, 2013)[4] (with Richard D. Taylor)
  • Media in Transition (Tzivonim Publishers, 2015, in Hebrew)[5] in honor of professor Dan Caspi. (with Nelly Elias, Galit Nimrod, and Zvi Reich) department.
  • References

    Amit Schejter Wikipedia