- President Reuven (Rubi) Rivlin letter, 26 January 2016 to the participants of the conference on Israeli leadership abroad.
- Nathan, Gilad. 2015. The OECD Expert Group on Migration. Annual Report: International Migration Israel 2015-2016. Ruppin Academic Center: The Institute for Immigration and Social integration.
- Cohen, Yinon. 2011. “Israeli-Born Emigrants: Size, Destinations and Selectivity”. International Journal of Comparative Sociology 52 (1-2): 45-62. The Knesset, Center for Research and Information, March 11, 2012. The Number of Israelis Who Live Abroad. 7 pp. Central Bureau of Statistics, Statistical Abstracts. Various Years.
- Cohen, 2011.
- Cohen, 2011.
- Central Bureau of Statistics. 2015. Annual Abstract, 2015. Jerusalem.
- Central Bureau of Statistics. 2015. Announcement to the Media, 14.8.2017
- Cohen, 2011.
- Tolts, Mark. 2016. “Demography of the Contemporary Russian-Speaking Jewish Diaspora,” Z. Gitelman (ed.), The New Jewish Diaspora: Russian-Speaking Immigrants in the United States, Israel, and Germany. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2016, pp. 30-31. Tolts M. 2016. “Post-Soviet Jewish Demographic Dynamics: An Analysis of Recent Data”. Demoscope Weekly (Moscow), 2016, No. 693-694, pp. 18-20 (in Russian).
Rebhun Uzi and Israel Pupko. 2011. Fars Close: Migration, Jewish Identification, and Attachment to Homeland among Israelis Abroad. Jerusalem: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Ministry of Absorption, and the Jewish Agency. - Central Bureau of Statistics. 2016. Statistical Abstract, 2016. Jerusalem.
- Cohen, 2011.
- Rebhun, Uzi, Heinz, Sunker, and Dani, Kranz (in preparation). Double Burden: Israeli Jews in Contemporary Germany.
- Central Bureau of Statistics. 2015.
- Rebhun et al. (in preparation).
- Cohen, 2011; Rebhun et al. (in preparation).
- Rebhun, Uzi and Lilach Lev Ari. (2010). American Israelis: Migration, Transnationalism, and Diasporic Identity. Leiden: Brill.
- Cohen, 2011.
- Rebhun et al. (in preparation).
- Cohen, 2011.
- Cohen, 2011.
- Cohen, 2011.
- Noted that there are, indeed, religious and ultra-Orthodox Israelis abroad, especially in the US. However, their relatively small sample in surveys carried out among Israelis abroad prevent from assessing the size of these two sub-groups.
- Rebhun et al. (in preparation).
- See also: “After the Zionist Revolution: Patterns of Jewish Collective Identity among Israeli Jews”. Annual Assessment 2016. Jerusalem: Jewish People Policy Institute.
- See also: Yogev Karasenty, On Israelis Abroad. JPPI, 2014.
- See discussion on this topic at Karasenty, above.
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