ISGAP Executive Director Charles Asher Small examines how academic institutions have become platforms for spreading undemocratic ideologies and antisemitic narratives through the influence of soft power. 1

Read more

Charles Asher Small, Executive Director, ISGAP, Natan Sharansky, Chairman, ISGAP and Michal Cotler-Wunsh Special Envoy for Combatting Antisemitism, Israel, offer opening remarks during the annual ISGAP-Oxford Oxford Summer Institute 0

Read more

Dr. Rachel Fish discusses Israel education post-October 7th, while Dr. David Patterson and Dr. Cary Nelson examine the surge of anti-Israel sentiment on American campuses, with ISGAP leaders Charles Asher Small and David Harris. 4

Read more

The Intersectionality of Racism and Antisemitism” is explored by educators William Kolbrener, Ansel Brown and Carlton Long. 2

Read more

ISGAP leaders Charles Small and David Harris discuss fighting antisemitism with Mosab Hassan Yousef, also known as The Green Prince, the former militant son of a Hamas co-founder who became a Shin Bet agent and Israel advocate. 1

Read more

Israeli historian and author Benny Morris gives a lecture at the ISGAP-Oxford Summer Institute entitled “A New Look at the 1948 War.” 5

Read more

Columbia University Professor Assaf Zeevi and Katie, a senior at Columbia, discuss campus protests, antisemitism, the university’s response, and a call for action, with ISGAP leaders Charles Small and David Harris. 3

Read more

Ansel Brown delivers a stirring lecture on “The Common Bonds and Experiences of the African and Jewish Diasporas,” as part of ISGAP’s international “Intersectionality” of Antisemitism seminar series. 2

Read more

Founder and Executive Director of ISGAP Charles Small delivers a talk on “Globalization, Antisemitism, Race and Israel-Bashing” from Pembroke College in Oxford, England. 0

Read more

In a discussion of forgotten refugees of the Arab-Israeli conflict, ISGAP Vice Chair David Harris is joined by his wife Giulietta Boukhobza , who shares her family’s story of their harrowing escape from Libya. 24

Read more