Ruth Gavison


Ruth Gavison was an Israeli expert on human rights, law professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and recipient of the Israel Prize.

Biography

Ruth Gavison was born in Jerusalem on March 28, 1945 to a Sephardic Jewish family. Her father's ancestors were Moroccan Jews who immigrated from Tetouan to Jerusalem in the 19th century. Her mother's side was Greek Jewish. She grew up in Haifa. She graduated from Hebrew University law school in 1969. In 1970, she was also awarded a B.A. in Philosophy and Economics.
Further academic degrees and qualifications:

Academic career

Her areas of research included Ethnic Conflict, the Protection of Minorities, Human Rights, Political Theory, Judiciary Law, Religion and Politics, and Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. She was a member of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.

Judicial career

Gavison was nominated for a position on Israel's Supreme Court in 2005 but failed to secure a majority for the appointment. Justice Minister Daniel Friedmann asserted in 2007 that the Supreme Court justices opposed her nomination because they disagreed with her views. Gavison was critical of the court as an institution seeking to "judicialize politics" and freely expressed her views to the media.

Published works

She published an essay on privacy in the Yale Law Journal and edited a volume dedicated to H.L.A. Hart's legal philosophy published by Oxford. Recently, she published an essay about days of rest in divided societies, included in Law and Religion in Comparative Context, published by Cambridge. She was a member of the editorial board of the Jewish Review of Books.
With Rabbi Yaaqov Medan, she coauthored the Gavison-Medan Covenant, a proposal for the coexistence of religious and secular Israelis.

Civil rights activism

Gavison was a founding member of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, where she served for many years as Chairperson and as President from 1996 to 1999. Professor Gavison was a member of the International Commission of Jurists from 1998 to 2008. In 2005 she founded Metzilah and served as its chair and founding president.

Academic appointments

Public committees

Gavison was a member of numerous Israeli Public Inquiry committees, including the following:
  • 1976: Member, Kahan Committee on Privacy.
  • 1983: Member, committee on the privacy of information in governmental data-banks.
  • 1987–1990: Member, a public committee on orthodox-secular relationships in Israel.
  • 1994–1997: Member, National Committee for Scientific and Technological Infrastructure.
  • 1996–1997: Member, Zadok committee on press laws.
  • 1997–1998: Member, Shamgar Committee on the Appointment of the Attorney-General and Related Issues.
  • 2006–2008: Member, Winograd Commission to investigate the 2006 Lebanon War.
  • 2013–2015: commissioned by the minister of Justice to report on the constitutional anchoring of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state.

Awards and recognition