Roni Stauber

Roni Stauber (Hebrew: רוני שטאובר; born July 25, 1961) is an Israeli historian.

In particular, he examines the interrelations between ideology and politics, and between collective memory and historiography, with a focus on Israeli-German relations.

His doctoral dissertation, supervised by Prof. Dina Porat, discussed the initiatives of the first Israeli governments and the ideological movements to commemorate the Holocaust in Israel in its formative years.

During the 1990s he served as the academic coordinator of the Stephen Roth Institute for the Study of Modern Antisemitism, which Prof. Dina Porat and he established.

[6] Among the books that he has written and edited: Lesson for this Generation (Jerusalem, 2000, Ish-Shalom Award for best academic book in the field of Israeli History);[6] The Holocaust in Israeli Public Debate in the 1950s: Ideology and Memory,(London/Portland, OR, 2007);[7] Laying the Foundations for Holocaust Research – The Impact of Philip Friedman  (Jerusalem, 2009);[8] The Roma – A Minority in Europe: Historical, Political and Social Perspectives [9] (New York, 2007); Collaboration with the Nazis: Public Discourse after the Holocaust (London, 2010);[10] Holocaust and Antisemitism: Research and Public Discourse, Yad Vashem and Tel Aviv University, 2015.

The Holocaust in Israeli Public Debate in the 1950s: Ideology and Memory