Arnon Golan
A. Ph.D. Dissertation
A. Golan, The New Settlement Map of the Area Abandoned by Arab population Within the Territory of the State of Israel During Israel's War of Independence and After, 1948-1950, (Hebrew), May 1993, Tutors: Prof. Yehoshua Ben Arieh, Prof. Shalom Reichman.
B. Books
1) A. Kadish, A. Sela, A. Golan (2000), The Occupation of Lydda, July 1948, Tel Aviv: Israel Ministry of Defense and Hagana Historical Archive (Hebrew).
2) A Golan (2001), Wartime Spatial Changes: Former Arab Territories Within the State of Israel, 1948-1950, Sde Boker: The Ben Gurion Heritage Center, Ben Gurion University of the Negev (Hebrew).
C. Articles in Refereed Journals
1. Y. Ben Arieh, A Golan (1984), Sub Divisions and Settlements in 19th Century Sanjak of Nablus, Eretz Israel, 17 (Hebrew), pp. 38-65.
2. A. Golan (1991), From Abandoned Village to Urban Neighborhood, Kafr Salama 1948-1950, Merhavim, 4 (Hebrew), pp. 71-85.
3. A.Golan (1992), The Transfer of Abandoned Rural Arab Lands to Jews During Israel's War of Independence, Cathedra, 63 (Hebrew), pp. 122-154.
4. A. Golan (1993), Jewish Refugees in Israel's War of Independence, Contemporary Jewry, 8 (Hebrew), pp. 217-242.
5. A. Golan (1995), The Demarcation of Tel Aviv - Jaffa's Municipal Boundaries Following the 1948 War: Political Conflicts and Spatial Outcome, Planning Perspectives, 10 (1995), pp. 383-398.
6. A. Golan (1996), Ashkelon: Populating the Abandoned Arab Space and the Planning of an Early Development Town, Iunim Bitkumat Israel, 6 (Hebrew), pp. 226-249.
7. A. Golan (1996), The 1948 War and the Transformation of Abandoned Rural Arab Areas in the Landscape, Ha-Zionut, 20/21 (Hebrew), pp. 221-242.
8. A. Golan (1997), The Transformation of Abandoned Arab Rural Areas, Israel Studies 2 (1), pp. 94-110.
9. A. Golan (1997), Central Place Theory and the Israeli Geography: Space, Holocaust, Modernism and Silence, Horizons in Geography, 46-47 (Hebrew), pp. 39-51.
10. A. Golan (1998), Establishment, War Refugees and Immigrants: The Innitial Stage of the Formation of the Israeli Urban System During and Following the 1948 War, Mechkarim beGeografia shel Eretz Israel, 15 (Hebrew), pp 28-46.
11. A. Golan (1998), Jewish Nationalism, European Colonialism and Modernity: The Origins of the Israeli Public Housing System, Housing Studies 13 (4), pp. 487-505.
12. A. Golan (1999), Zionism, Urbanism, and the 1948 Wartime Transformation of the Arab Urban System in Palestine, Historical Geography 27, pp. 152-166.
13. M. Azaryahu, A. Golan (2001), Renaming the Landscape: The Formation of the Hebrew map of Israel 1949-1960, Journal of Historical Geography 27 (4), pp.178-195.
14. A. Golan (2001) European Imperialism and the Development of Modern Palestine: Was Zionism a Form of Colonialism? Space & Polity 5 (2), pp. 127-143.
15. A. Golan (2001), From Arab to Israeli Towns: Lydda and Ramle 1948-1967, Contemporary Jewry 14 (Hebrew), pp. 263-289
16. A. Golan (2002), The Politics of Urban Demolition and Human Landscape Transformation, War in History 9(4), pp. 431-445.
17. A Golan (2002), Israeli Historical Geography and the Holocaust: Reconsidering the Research Agenda, Journal of Historical Geography 28 (4), pp. 554-565.
18. A. Golan (2002), Redistribution and Resistance: Urban Conflicts During and Following the 1948 War, Modern Jewish Studies 1 (2), pp. 117-130.
19. A. Golan (2003), Jewish Settlement of Former Arab Towns and their Incorporation into the Israeli Urban System (1948-1950), Israel Affairs 9 (1&2), pp. 149-164. Also published in: A. Bligh (ed.), The Israeli Palestinians: An Arab Minority in the Jewish State, London and Portland OR: Frank Cass, 2003, pp. 149-164.
20. A. Golan (2003) Lydda and Ramle: From Palestinian Arab to Israeli Towns, 1948-1967, Middle Eastern Studies, 39 (4), pp. 121-139.
21. A. Golan (2003) The Development of Tel Aviv's Transportation System and the Formation of a Modern Streetscape, Cathedra, 108, pp. 163-182 (Hebrew).
D. Articles Or Chapters in Books Which Are Not Conference Proceedings
1. S. Reichman, A.Golan (1991), Irredentism and Boundary Adjustments in Post-World War I Europe, N. Chazan (ed.), Irredentism and International Politics, Boulder: Lynne Rienner & London: Adamantine Press, pp. 51-68.
2. A. Golan (1995), The Transfer to Jewish Control of Abandoned Arab Land During the War of Independence, S.I. Troen, N. Lucas (eds.), Israel, The First Decade of Independence, Albany: State University of New York Press, pp. 403-440.
3. A. Golan (2002), Ashkelon: Populating the Abandoned Arab Space and the Planning of an Early Development Town, A. Sasson, Z. Safrai and N. Sagiv (eds.), Ashkelon the Bride of the South, Ashkelon: Ashkelon Academic College (Hebrew), pp. 163-184.
4. A. Golan, M. Azaryahu (2004), The Hebraicization of the Map of Israel, Y. Bar-Gal, N. Kliot, A. Peled (eds.). Erets Israel Studies: Aviel Ron Book, Haifa: The Department of Geography and Environmental Science (Hebrew), pp. 60-68.
E. Articles in Conference Proceedings
1. A. Golan (1999), Israel and Greece: Wartime and Postwar Spatial Changes in the Mediterranean Basin in the 20th Century, D. Sivan, H. Kutiel (eds.), Mare Nostrum: Physical, Human, and Cultural Aspects in the Mediterranean, The University of Haifa, 1999, pp. 164-171.
F. Other Scientific Publications
1. A. Peled, A. Golan, G. Gat, M.Yaffe (1998), Survey on Constructing a Data-base for Establishing a National Maps and Aerial photos Archive, Report Submitted to the General Manager of the Israeli National Survey Center (Hebrew).
G. Book Reviews
1. New Worlds - New Geographies, John R. Short: Syracuse University Press, Syracuse 1998, Political Geography, 19 (2000), pp. 667-669.
2. Ideology and Settlement: The Jewish National Fund, 1897-1914, Zvi Shilony: The Magnes Press 1998, Jewish History, 14 (2000) pp. 375-377.
3. Sacred Landscape: The Buried History of the Holy Land Since 1948, Meron Benvenisti, Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 2000, Journal of Israeli History 20 (2/3) (2001), pp. 195-199.
4. The Negev: From Desert to Cultivated Land: The Development and Settlement of the Negev 1949-1956, Sde Boker: The Ben Gurion Heritage Center, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, 2002, Horizons in Geography 56 (2003), pp. 129-130 (Hebrew).
H. Other Publications
1. A. Golan (1984), Tel Aviv in the First World War, Idan, 3, Tel Aviv: The Formative Phase 1909-1934 (Hebrew), pp. 62-76.
2. A. Golan (1992), More on the Transfer of Abandoned Arab Lands, Cathedra, 66 (Hebrew), pp. 184-186
3. A. Golan (1994), Refugees, Newcomers and Abandoned Neighborhoods, Idan, 18, The Partitioned Jerusalem, 1948-1967 (Hebrew), pp. 69-90.
4. A. Golan (1994), Christaller and the Nazi Regime, The Dark Side of the Central Places Theory, Geographia, 10 (Hebrew), pp. 5-7
5. A. Golan (1998), Rural Settlement in Israel’s First Decade, Idan, 20, Israel’s First Decade (Hebrew), pp. 83-102.
I. Other Works and Activities Connected with Scholarly Field
1. I. Amit, A. Golan (1996), Unit No. 4: Settlement Strategy the Achievement of Political Goals, Settlement Geography of Israel: Spatial Experiments, Tel Aviv: Israel Open University (Hebrew).
2. A. Golan, I. Amit (1995), Unit No. 5: National Planning and Population Dispersion, Settlement Geography of Israel: Spatial Experiments, Tel Aviv: Israel Open University (Hebrew).
3. A. Golan, M. Hoshen (1997), Unit No. 7: The Rural Settlements Map 1948-1967, Settlement Geography of Israel: Spatial Experiments, Tel Aviv: Israel Open University (Hebrew).
4. A. Golan (1998), Telecourse: Human Geography - a Global View, Tel Aviv: The Israel Open University (Hebrew).
5. D. Giladi, A. Golan, (2001), Unit No. 4: Urban Planning and Development, Israel’s First Decade, Tel Aviv: Israel Open University (Hebrew).