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YU News

Dr. Yossi Korazim-Korosy Presents Research into At-Risk Arab Youth

Feb 26, 2004 -- Arab youth in Israel can benefit greatly from improved social services, according to Dr. Yossi Korazim-Korosy, of Israel’s Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, who addressed faculty at Yeshiva University’s Wurzweiler School of Social Work Feb. 24. Dr. Korazim-Korosy, head of the research and planning unit at the Ministry’s Service for Children and Youth division, presented the results of research he conducted into child protection in the Arab communities of Israel’s northern and southern regions. Israel’s social welfare system faces many challenges, including recent budget cuts. This applies especially to delivering services to Arabs living in outlying areas. As Israel’s Arab population multiplies, the social needs of its youth become more urgent, according to Dr. Korazim-Korosy. Israeli Arabs now make up 20 percent of the total population within Israel’s pre-1967 borders, but that figure increases to 25 percent in the under-18 bracket and 29 percent for children under age 4. Inadequate communal services for youth increase the risk for neglect and abuse. Furthermore, with local welfare services in Israel enacted into law only in the past 10 years, many Arabs do not understand how social workers can help them, he added. Dr. Korazim-Korosy said social workers need to spot risk factors such as early marriages, the consequences of polygamy, and the social and financial rights of young women. Some of his recommendations will be implemented in the north of Israel, where the majority of the Arab population lives, thanks to matching funding from the UJA-Federation of New York and the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC)/Ashalim program.