Bar-Gal, Y.
(1982). Ruralization rate and migration balance under core-periphery conditions
- The Israeli case. GeoJournal, 6, 165-172.
Drori, I., Sofer, M., and Schnell, I. (1996). Arab industry in Israel: Survey of the present situation and future tendencies: The Institute for Israeli Arab Studies, Beit Berl. (Hebrew)
Fleischer,
A., and Schwartz, D. (1996). Flexible labor market structure and its impact on
the peripheral regions in Israel: Clark University. (Hebrew)
Fleischer,
A., Applebaum, L., and Banin, T. (1990). Employment and unemployment of women
in Israel's peripheral areas. Rehovot: Development Study Center.
Fleischer,
A., Felsenstein, D., Marguiles, J., and Banin, T. (1992). The absorption of new
immigrants in the peripherally located rural settlements. Rehovot: Development
Study Center. (Hebrew)
Gonen, A.
(1984). From a core-periphery structure to a differentiated mosaic in the older
cities and towns of Israel. Eretz-Israel, 17, 74-82. (Hebrew)
Gradus, Y.
(1990). The shrinking of the country towards a Jewish Hong Kong in the Middle
East. Economic Quarterly, 41, 88-90. (Hebrew)
Gradus, Y.,
and Einy, E. (1980). The industrial gap between core and periphery in Israel. Economic
Quarterly, 27, 263-275.
(Hebrew)
Gradus, Y.,
and Einy, E. (1981). Trends in core-periphery industrialization gaps in Israel.
Geography Research Forum, 3, 25-37.
Gradus, Y.,
and Krakover, S. (1976). Changing the spatial structure of industry in Israel.
In D.H.K. Amiram and Y. Ben-Arieh (Eds.), Geography in Israel (pp.
109-139). Jerusalem: Tsur-Or Press.
(Hebrew)
Gradus, Y.,
and Krakover, S. (1976). The level and nature of industrialization in central
and developing regions. Economic Quarterly, 23, 66-78. (Hebrew)
Gradus, Y.,
and Lazin, F. (1986). The role of a university in a peripheral region: The case
of Ben-Gurion university of the Negev. Policy Studies, 14,
487-494.
Gradus, Y.,
Ajaegbu, H., and van den Berg, L.M. (1997). Market Gardening in Jobs, Nigeria.
In G. Jones and A. Morris (Eds.), Issues of Environmental, Economic and
Social Stability in the Development of Marginal Regions: Politicos and
Evaluation (pp. 122-131). Glasgow: University of Glasgow and
Strathclyde.
Kipnis, B.
(1989). Plant Scale and Manufacturing Policies in Peripheral Regions. An
Intercultural Analysis: Israel, Brazil and Belgium. Aldershot:
Avebury.
Kipnis, B.
(1990). Have the national peripheries lost their hopes? Environmental
Planning, 42-43, 139-149.
(Hebrew)
Kipnis, B.,
and Swyngedouw, E. (1988). Manufacturing RandD in a peripheral region: A case
study of Limburg, Belgium. The Professional Geographer, 40(2),
149-158.
Krakover,
S. (1998). Population dispersion as reflected in the national urban system. Studies
in the Geography of Israel, 16, 255-271. (Hebrew)
Krakover,
S. (1998). Testing the turning point hypothesis in city-size distribution. Urban
Studies, 35(2), 2183-2196.
Krakover,
S., and Aharonovitch, Y. (1998). Regional building cycles versus national
cycles. Economic Quarterly, 98(1), 64-82. (Hebrew)
Lipshitz,
G. (1991). Development towns - A
new basis for policy planning. Israel Studies, 3, 3-10.
Lipshitz,
G. (1991). Internal migration in Israel within a core-periphery structure. The
Pennsylvania Geographer, 29, 34-35.
Lipshitz,
G. (1993). Dispersal of high-tech settlements as a strategy for peripheral
regional development. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Social Geografie, 84,
40-50.
Lipshitz,
G. (1996). Core versus periphery in Israel over time: Inequality, internal
migration and immigration. In Y. Gradus and G. Lipshitz (Eds.), The Mosaic
of Israeli Geography at the Close of the Twentieth Century (pp. 13-28).
Beer Sheva: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Press.
Marguiles, J., Fleischer, A., Eger, M., and Banin, T. (1993). The absorption of new immigrants in peripheral rural settlements in Israel. Rehovot: Development Study Center. (Hebrew)
Portnov, B.A. and Erell, E. (1998).
Clustering of the urban field as a precondition for sustainable urban growth in
peripheral areas: The case of Israel. Review of Urban and Regional
Development Studies, 10(2), 123-141.
Portnov, B.A., and Pearlmutter, D.
(1999). Sustainability of urban growth in peripheral areas: factors and
paradigms of regional planning. Progress in Planning, 52(4),
239-308.
Portnov, B.A., and Etzion, Y. (2000). Investigating the effects of public policy on the interregional patterns of population change: The case of Israel. Socio-economic Planning Sciences, 34: 239-269.
Razin, E.
(1988). The role of ownership characteristics in the industrial development of
Israel's peripheral towns. Environment and Planning A, 20,
1235-1252.
Schwartz,
D., and Felsenstein, D. (1990). Promoting entrepreneurship in peripheral areas.
Rehovot: Development Study Center. (Hebrew)
Sofer, M.
(1988). Core-periphery structure in Fiji. Environment and Planning D:
Society and Space, 6(1), 55-74.
Sofer, M.
(1992). The core-periphery paradigm and capitalist development in the third
world: A critical review. Horizons in Geography, 33-34,
87-102. (Hebrew)
Sofer, M.,
Schnell, I., and Drori, I. (1993). The Arab industry in Israel: Research
report: The Institute for Israeli Arab Studies, Beit Berl. (Hebrew)
Sonis, M.
(1994). Calculus of iterations and labor-capital core-periphery relative
distribution dynamics. Chaos, Solutions and Fractals, 4(2),
32-50.
Stern, E.
(1991). Cultural deprivation between core and periphery. In A. Shachar (Ed.), Book
of Eretz Israel (pp. 221-227). Jerusalem: The Exploration Society.
Taaffe,
E.J., Krakover, S., and Gauthier, H.L. (1992). Interactions between
spread-and-backwash, population turnaround, and corridor effects in the
inter-metropolitan periphery. Urban Geography, 13, 503-533.