Every year, the UCLA Y&S Nazarian Center for Israel Studies sponsors a variety of courses related to modern Israel in departments across campus. These courses qualify for the Israel Studies minor offered by the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures and may qualify for other majors and minors. More information on the Israel Studies minor can be found on the Near Eastern Languages and Cultures Department website. Search for upcoming, Center-sponsored courses below.
Center-Sponsored Courses
Fall 2025
National Security vs. Human Rights: Israel in Comparative Perspective
International Area Studies 188: Special Course in International & Area Studies
Instructor: Dr. Rachela Er’el
Day & Time: Mon/Wed | 11am–12:15pm
Location: Bunche Hall, Rm. 3211
Course Description: A research-oriented examination of constant tension that democracies face between protecting human rights and maintaining national security. Students review and discuss key theoretical approaches to analysis of this tension. Study asks how security decisions are made, what considerations guide them, what social goals are advanced in the name of national security, and what impact using national security considerations has on democracy's strength. Israel used as case study. Ongoing global trends are highlighted using Israel's political and institutional structure, and its continuous dealings with external and internal threats.
Winter 2026
Diaspora Politics
Political Science 139: Special Studies in International Relations
Instructor: Dr. Elizabeth Stein
Day & Time: Mon/Wed | 8–9:50 am
Location: Haines Hall, Rm. 118
Course Description: Diasporas are minority ethnic groups of immigrant origin that have sustained psychological, social, political, and material connections to their putative ancestral homeland or country of origin. This course examines how diasporas organize to create activist, advocacy, and lobbying movements and organizations to advance their collective interests among domestic policymakers and political leaders, all while navigating normative, structural, and political opportunities and constraints in the countries where they live. We examine scholarly approaches and problems relevant to diaspora politics in the 21st century with current-events examples from Jewish, Palestinian, Armenian, Iraqi, and Ethiopian communities mostly in the US, and from Hungarian and Turkish communities throughout Europe.
Governing the Mosaic: Israel's Minority Politics in Comparative Perspective
Sociology 180A: Special Topics in Sociology
Instructor: Dr. Rachela Er’el
Day & Time: Tu/Th | 12:30–1:45 pm
Location: Royce Hall, Rm. 190
Course Description: This course asks how nations address and manage complexities of cultural and ethnic diversity; to what extent state policies and institutional frameworks impact dynamics between minority and majority groups; and what role social structures and interactions play in shaping collective identity of social groups within national context. Study centers on dynamics of minority-majority relationships, with specific focus on Israel as case study. Key topics for discussion encompass multiculturalism, discrimination, inequality, migration, and social mobility. Also, students make comparisons between how Israel addresses social diversity and how other complex societies—such as U.S., Australia, and European nations—handle similar issues.
Researching Sources and Methodologies for History of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
History C187L: Topics in Historiography
Instructor: Dr. Omri Shafer Raviv
Day & Time: Mon | 12–2:50pm
Location: Public Affairs, Rm. 2278
Course Description: Development of skills to conduct research through close work with primary sources, using the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as the main case study. Analysis of 20th-century sources, including archival documents, diaries, poems, official statements, and papers that serve different research approaches, such as political and social history. Discussions address real dilemmas that historians of Israel and Palestine face. Focus on the role of archives, including what archives exist, why some are disappearing, what they contain, and how they have changed the understanding of this particular history.
Introduction to Israeli and Palestinian Literature
Comparative Literature 191: Variable Topics in Comparative Literature
Instructor: Dr. Ethan Pack
Day & Time: Mon/Wed | 3:30–4:45 PM
Location: Public Affairs, Rm. 2333
Course Description: A survey of literature from Israel and Palestine, and from wider Israeli and Palestinian diasporas, over past century. Texts grapple with most compelling issues in Israeli and Palestinian life today, including impact of political violence. Students read groundbreaking texts that reflect growth of these two national cultures. Consideration of impact of war, trauma, and postwar trauma; ongoing crisis of Palestinian statelessness; ethnic diversity of Israel's Jewish immigrants; long shadow of Holocaust; place of religion in Israel and Palestine; and changing roles of gender, sexuality, and protest across these two societies. Focus on ways that literature has shaped collective consciousness around these and other formative issues.
Spring 2026
Introduction to International Human Rights Law
Global Studies 160: Selected Topics in International and Area Studies
Instructor: Dr. Rachela Er’el
Day & Time:TBA
Location: TBA
Course Description: TBA
For questions whether a course will count toward another major or minor, please consult your departmental Student Affairs Officer.
Search for classes below related to Israel in a wide range of disciplines. Select academic year and quarter to view course offerings.