סיימו דוקטורט

סיימו דוקטורט

אונה שגב

אונה שגב
ד"ר
אונה
שגב
Research Topic: Visual representation ‎of gender in urban ‎signage
מנחה: פרופ' אסתר שלי ניומן ז"ל

A graphic designer, lecturer and researcher based in Tel Aviv.  A graduate of the Visual Communication department, Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem, holding an M.A degree from the Interdisciplinary Program in the Arts from Tel Aviv University and a PhD candidate in the department of communication and journalism in the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. My dissertation focuses on visual representation of gender in urban signage. I examine human pictograms which appear in official urban signage (OUS) in Dizengoff street, Tel Aviv, as meaningful linguistic landscape (LL) artifacts that play a significant role in the institutionalizing and normalizing of visual representation of gender.

  • Research Interests:
  • Visual communication in public space
  • Representation of gender
  • Wayfinding systems and urban signage
  • Graphic design ethics

Awards and Prizes:

2020 - The "Chevruta" scholarship for Doctoral Reading Groups

2020 - The Smart Institute of Communication Research Grant

2019 - The Lafer Center for Women's and Gender Studies scholarship

 

 

 

 

עאישה אגבריה

עאישה אגבריה
ד"ר
עאישה
אגבריה
Tie management on social networks during religious identity re-formation among young Muslim women
מנחה: פרופ' ניקולס ג'ון

 

I am a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. My dissertation focuses on social media use and religious identity change. Specifically, I focus on the experience of Muslim Arab women who use social media while becoming more religious despite possible rejection from their immediate environment. 
My recent work focuses on identity and media use among Arabs in Israel. This research population can be investigated to understand individual and collective identity-formation in times of personal and social crises while witnessing the ongoing development of media technologies.

 

Research Interests

Identity

Digital religion

New media

Narratives

Selected Publication

Birkner, T., Agbarya, A., Meyers, O., & Somerstein, R. (2022). The News Media and the Ever-Present Fear in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. In Media and the Dissemination of Fear (pp. 129-152). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.

Agbarya, A., & John, N. (2021). Online tie and content management and changing religious identity among Muslim Arab women in Israel. Information, Communication & Society, 1-16.

John, N., & Agbarya, A. (2021). Punching up or turning away? Palestinians unfriending Jewish Israelis on Facebook. New Media & Society23(5), 1063-1079.

Lewis, N., Martinez, L. S., Agbarya, A., & Piatok-Vaisman, T. (2016). Examining patterns and motivations for drug-related information seeking and scanning behavior: A cross-national comparison of American and Israeli college students. Communication Quarterly64(2), 145-172

 

Awards and Prizes

PhD Endowment Grant of The Smart institute, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. 2021.

Tamkeen initiative, for The relationship between the Palestinian researcher and research participants at home: a double look (in Arabic). 2020

Mada al-Carmel Arab Center for Applied Social Studies, Haifa. 2019.

 

אולגה פסיצלסקיה

אולגה
ד"ר
אולגה
פסיצלסקיה
Reception of ideological narratives in Russian-Ukrainian conflict: the role of identity
מנחה: פרופ' כריסטיאן באדן

Olga Pasitselska is a PhD candidate at the Department of Communication & Journalism, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her dissertation project, supervised by Prof. Christian Baden and supported by the Ariane de Rothschild Women Doctoral Program, is focused on social negotiation of mediated propagandistic narratives during the Russian-Ukrainian conflict. The study aims to understand how socially interactive audiences adopt and reject, interpret, and renegotiate conflicting media narratives in the contaminated information environment. The study contributes to understanding of public opinion formation and audiences’ perceptions of the media, the conflict, and the political processes during the violent political conflict.

 

Olga’s research interests include ideological discourse research, discursive construction of consensus and dissent, reception of dis- and misinformation, media use and media avoidance by the socially interactive and active audiences.

 

Education

March 2018 – present – PhD Candidate, Department of Communication and Journalism, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 

Thesis: Reception of ideological narratives in Russian-Ukrainian conflict: the role of identity
Advisor: Prof. Christian Baden

October 2014 – July 2017 – MSc, Department of Communication and Journalism, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Specialty: Political Communication. Diploma Magna Cum Laude

Master’s thesis (article): “Ukrainian discourse through the lens of Russian media: Construction of ideological discourse”
Supervisor: Prof. Zohar Kampf

September 2009 – June 2013 – B. A., Oles’ Honchar Dnipro National University

Specialty: Editing and Publishing, Ukrainian and Russian linguistics. Diploma Magna Cum Laude

 

Publications

Pasitselska O. & Baden C. (2020) Who are ‘the people’? Uses of empty signifiers in propagandistic news discourse. Journal of Language and Politics, 19(4): 666-690.

Pasitselska O. (2017). Ukrainian crisis through the lens of Russian media: Construction of ideological discourse. Discourse & Communication, 11(6): 591–609.

 

Peer-reviewed conference presentations

Better ask your neighbor: Audience’s sense-making strategies in a conflicting information environment. Paper to be presented at the 8th European Communication Conference to be held in Braga, October 2021.

Propaganda literacy: How Ukrainian audiences renegotiate propagandistic messages in the times of conflict? Presented at the “Discourse and Communication as Propaganda” conference [online], Brussels, Belgium, September 2020.

People, nation, land: Uses of empty signifiers in propagandistic conflict news narratives. Presented at the 7th European Communication Conference (ECREA), Lugano, Switzerland, November 2018.

 

Presentations & Workshops

Better ask your neighbor: Audience’s sense-making strategies in conflicting information environment. Presented at the Mainz-Jerusalem Mini Conference of the Department of Communication and Journalism, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, December 2020.

Logics of exclusion: How Ukrainian audiences renegotiate propagandistic messages in times of conflict? Research Workshop, conducted as a part of the Seminar Series Political Communication in Russia, Eurasia and Eastern Europe. [online] University of Passau, Germany, November 2020.

 

Honors & Awards

March 2019 – 2022 – Ariane de Rothschild Fellowship for outstanding female doctoral students.

October 2019 – October 2020 – Hans Guth Dreyfus Fellowship for research on conflict management and resolution.

January 2019 – The Faculty of Social Sciences travel grant for fieldwork research.

December 2018 – May 2019 – The Department of Communication and Journalism scholarship for research students, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

August 2018 – Erasmus+ grant for participation in Radboud Summer School, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.

April 2018 – Wain Doctoral Student Scholarship for Communication, Media and Conflict Research.

March 2018 – August 2018 – The Department of Communication and Journalism scholarship for research students, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

September 2009 – June 2013 – Increased State Scholarship, Oles’ Honchar Dnipro National University.

 

Teaching experience

Spring 2020 – Political communication BA, Teaching Assistant

Autumn 2019 – Statistics for communication students BA, Teaching Assistant

 

Research skills

Qualitative research methods: Serial focus group and interview methodology, Discourse and narrative analysis (Atlas), Content analysis of political and cultural texts (Atlas), Grounded Theory;

Quantitative research methods (using SPSS and LexisNexis): Experimental research design, Quantitative content analysis, Surveys;

Conversational analysis, linguistic analysis;

Literary criticism.

 

Community service & Extracurricular activities

2020 – present – member of the Faculty of Social Sciences Doctoral Student Program Steering Committee

2020 – present – reviewer for International Communication Association Annual Conference, Political Communication Division

2017 – present – participant in the “Discourse Forum” research group leaded by Prof. Zohar Kampf

May 2019 – September 2019 – tutor at “Kehilat lomdim” - the academic guidance program of the Unit for Equal Opportunities, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 

June 2018 – student assistant at The Board of Governors event, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

טלי אהרוני

טלי
טלי
אהרוני
אמון ואי אמון בתחזיות פוליטיות במדיה
מנחה:פרופ' קרן טננבוים וינבלט

I am a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In my dissertation project I aim to develop a comprehensive conceptualization of (dis)trust in the current media ecology. To this end, I seek to account for multiple news trustworthiness dimensions, as well as the trust attitudes of various actors who participate in the creation and interpretation of the news.

I hold a Master’s degree in communication, and a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Communication, both from the Hebrew University. My MA thesis, written under the guidance of Prof. Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, explored the various aspects of suspicion and distrust in the perceptions of journalists covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

 

Research Interests

Trust and distrust

Journalistic production

News audiences

Social media

 

Selected Publications

Aharoni, T., Tenenboim-Weinblatt, K., Baden, C, and Overbeck M. (2020). Dynamics of (Dis)trust Between the News Media and Their Audience: The Case of the April 2019 Israeli Exit Polls. Journalism. doi: 10.117.

Aharoni, T., Kligler-Vilenchik, N, and Tenenboim-Weinblatt, K. (2020). “Be Less of a Slave to the News”: A Texto-Material Perspective on News Avoidance among Young Adults. Journalism studies. doi: 10.1080/1461670X.2020.1852885.

Aharoni, T. (2019). When High and Pop Culture (Re)Mix: An Inquiry into the Memetic Transformations of Artwork. New Media & Societydoi.org/10.1177/1461444819845917.

Aharoni, T., and Tenenboim-Weinblatt, K. (2019). Unpacking Journalists’ (Dis)Trust: Expressions of Suspicion in the Narratives of Journalists Covering the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. International Journal of Press/ Politicsdoi.org/10.1177/1940161219841902.

 

Awards and Prizes

2020-2024: The President’s Scholarship for Outstanding PhD Students, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2020: Most Engaging Visuals Video award, Association of Internet Researchers (AOIR) (With Eedan Amit-Danhi)

2017-2020: Honored for excellence in teaching, Faculty of Social Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2018: Rector’s Award for outstanding excellence, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2018: Top Student Paper award, Visual Communication Division, International Communication Association (ICA)

2018: Scholarship for M.A. thesis research, The Walter-Lebach Institute for Jewish-Arab Coexistence through Education, Faculty of social-sciences, Tel-Aviv University.

2016-2019: Dean’s award for outstanding excellence, Faculty of Social Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

רוני דנציגר

רוני
ד"ר
רוני
דנציגר
The dark side of sociability
מנחה: פרופ׳ זוהר קמפף

I am a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. I have a master’s degree in Pragmatics and Sociolinguistics and a bachelor’s degree in Romance Languages, both from the Hebrew University. My MA dissertation explored how Hebrew speakers respond to compliments and the role of compliments in the socio-pragmatics of Hebrew.

Areas of interest: Language and Society, Socio-Pragmatics and Political Discourse.

 

PhD Dissertation: Flattery: The Dark Side of Sociability

 

Important achievements

2018 - The Presidents scholarship for outstanding PhD students.

2017-2018 - The Communication Department at the Hebrew University Scholarship for doctoral students.

2014-2015: full MA scholarship from Mandel School for Educational Leadership.

2014 - Rector award for MA students.

2012 - Dean award for BA students.

 

Publications

Journals

Kampf, Z., & Danziger, R. (forthcoming 2021). Interpretive constructs in contrast: The case of flattery in Hebrew and in Palestinian Arabic. Contrastive Pragmatics.

Danziger, R. (2020). The pragmatics of flattery: The strategic use of solidarity-oriented actions. Journal of Pragmatics170, 413-425.‏

Kampf Z, Chudy D, Danziger R, Schreiber M. (2020). “Wait With Falling in Love”: Discursive Evaluation of Amicable Messages Conveyed by Opponents. Journal of Language and Social Psychology. doi:10.1177/0261927X20944977

Kampf, Z., Aldar, L., Danziger, R., & Schreiber, M. (2019). The pragmatics of amicable interstate communication. Intercultural Pragmatics16(2), 123-151.

Kampf, Z., & Danziger, R. (2019). ‘You dribble faster than Messi and jump higher than Jordan’: The art of complimenting and praising in political discourse. Journal of Politeness Research15(1), 1-23.

Danziger, R. (2018). Compliments and compliment responses in Israeli Hebrew: Hebrew university in Jerusalem students in interaction. Journal of Pragmatics124, 73-87.

Chapter in collection

Danziger, R., & Kampf, Z. (2020). Diplomatic compliments and praise on Twitter. Complimenting Behavior and (Self-) Praise across Social Media: New contexts and new insights313, 165.

 

Extras

Teaching Appointments

2020 - Teaching assistant in “Linguistic Communication” at the department of Communications and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

2019 –Teaching assistant in “Advanced Methods of Textual Analysis” at the department of Communications and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

2013-2015: Teaching assistant in “Introduction to Linguistics” at the Language School of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

2012-2015: Teaching and research assistant for Dr. Aldina Quintana-Rodriguez of the department of Romance and Latin American Studies.

Academic Activity

2020 – present: Research assistant – Prof. Zohar Kampf and Dr. Gadi Heimann, “What so special about 'special relationships'? The Meaning of Friendship in IR”

2017- Present: Forum coordinator, Discourse Analysis group, the faculty of Social Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Directors: Dr. Zohar Kampf and Dr. Michal Hamo)

2017 - 2020: Research assistant – Prof. Zohar Kampf, “Performing Peace: Understanding the Conditions for Achieving the (Re)conciliatory Consequences of Discursive Actions".

2017: Research assistant – Dr. Christian Baden and Dr. Keren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, “The Future of Catalonia”.

צליל שרון

צליל
ד"ר
צליל
שרון
ההגיון התרבותי של האזנה לפודקאסטים
מנחים: פרופ' ניקולס ג'ון ופרופ' עמית פינצ'בסקי

I am a Ph.D. student at the Department of Communication at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. My dissertation project focuses on the cultural logic of podcast listening. It explores how and why people listen to podcasts, how podcast creators construct their listening subjects and which actors and technologies participate in the datafication of podcast listening, placing them within a wider context of the attention economy. 

I hold a Master’s degree in communication and a Bachelor’s degree in Art History and Communication, both from the Hebrew University. In my Master’s dissertation I developed the concept of ‘networked anonymity’ that offers a new way of understanding anonymity in the age of real-name social media. My fields of interest include: philosophy and theory of media and communication, history of media technologies, digital culture and digital research methods. Outside the academic world, I have worked as a technology journalist and a digital copywriter, both driven by my fascination with ways in which people interact with technologies.

Besides working on my dissertation, I produce the Smart Institute’s podcast, The SIP.

 

Research Interests

Podcast studies

Philosophy and theory of media and communication

Digital culture

 

Selected Publications

Baden, C., & Sharon, T. (2021). Blinded by the lies? Toward an integrated definition of conspiracy theories. Communication Theory, 31(1), 82-106.

Sharon, T., & John, N. A. (2019). Imagining an Ideal Podcast Listener [Special issue]. Popular Communication 17(4), 333-‌347

Sharon, T., & John, N. A. (2018). Unpacking (the) Secret: Anonymous social media and the impossibility of networked anonymity. New Media & Society 20(11): 4177–4194.

 

Awards and Prizes

2019-2023: The President’s Scholarship for Outstanding PhD Students, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2019: Smart Institute scholarship for PhD Students, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2019: The Blum-Kulka excellence research award, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2019: Student Travel grant, International Communication Association (ICA)

2019: Travel grant, Political Communication Division, International Communication Association (ICA)

2018-2019: Honored for excellence in teaching, Faculty of Social Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2018: The Department of Communication and Journalism scholarship for outstanding doctoral students, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2018: Erasmus+ grant, European Union graduate student exchange programme 

2018: Travel grant, Popular Communication Division, International Communication Association (ICA)

2018: Travel grant, Department of Communication and Journalism, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2018: Gilbert scholarship, given to academic sponsors at the Equal Opportunity Unit, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2017: The Department of Communication and Journalism scholarship for outstanding doctoral students, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2015: The Department of Communication and Journalism scholarship for M.A. thesis research, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2014–2015: Honored for excellence in teaching, Faculty of Social Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

2012–2013: Dean's award for outstanding achievements, Faculty of Humanities, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem

נועה שקרג'י

נועה שקרג'י
ד"ר
נועה
שקרג'י
יצירה לא מקורית בעידן האינטרנט
מנחה: פרופ' עמית פינצ'בסקי

I hold a B.A. in Hebrew literature and an M.A. in communication and journalism, both from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Alongside academic work, I'm a poet and editor. I published an original poetry book (2017) and edited several books and poetry anthologies (2011, 2014).

My dissertation is titled "The Mediatization of Literature in the Age of Media". The dissertation focuses on the changes in the field of literature caused by the development of the digital era. The research describes these changes through the theoretical concept of mediatization, which deals with meta-process and profound influences of the media. The research examines these changes from four standpoints:  creators, production and marketing process, the audience feedback, and the literary establishment.

 

Research Interests

New Media Poetics

Mediatization

Digital Culture

Literature

Social Media

 

Selected Publication

Noa Shakargy (2021). Internetica: Poetry in the Digital Age, The Bialik Institute, Jerusalem. [Forthcoming]

Noa Shakargy, (2021). “I Am Not Myself, You See?” Remediation and Mediatization in the Insta Novels Project", Social Media + Society. doi: 10.1177/20563051211030500   

Noa Shakargy, (2020) Internetica: Poetry in the Digital Age, International Journal of Cultural Studies. doi: 10.1177/1367877920956655

Noa Shakargy, Yigal Shevars, Ketzia Alon, (2018) The Street's Word of Honour: Reading Ronny Someck's Poetry, Gama Publishing House, 294 pages. [Hebrew].

Noa Shakargy, (2018) The Relatives Come for a Visit: Literature and its Authors in Ronny Someck's Poetry in Noa Shakargy, Yigal Shevars, Ketzia Alon (eds.), The Street's Word of Honour: Reading Ronny Someck's Poetry, Gama Publishing House. pp. 160-188 [Hebrew].

Noa Shakargy, (2018) The Intercom Poet: Representations of poets and writers in Israeli Satirical Television Programs, Muza – Jurnal for Graduate Students in the Humanities (2) pp. 128-151. [Hebrew].

 

Awards and Prizes

2020 – The "Chevruta" scholarship for Doctoral Reading Groups.

2019-2022 – President’s Scholarship for Outstanding PhD Students.

2019-2021 – Doctoral Writing Program Coordinator Grant, Faculty of Social Sciences, Hebrew University.

2019 – The Smart Institute of communication Research Grant.

2018-2020-– Van Leer Institute, Library Fellow.

2018 – Gershon Shaked Prize for excellent M.A. paper, Ben Gurion University.

סנדרה סימונסן

סנדרה
ד"ר
סנדרה
סימונסן
Media Securization How National Media Cover Immigration and its Empirical Conditions
מנחה: פרופ' זהר קמפף

Sandra Simonsen is a PhD candidate in the Department of Communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Her areas of interests include Journalism, political communication, framing theory, discourse analysis, war, social identity and group conflict including inclusion and exclusion and how that manifest in language. Her doctoral research focuses on migration frames in national media environments and socio economic conditions related to migration in Sweden and Denmark.

Sandra Simonsen completed her Bachelor’s Degree in Philosophy from Aarhus University (Denmark) in 2012. She explored the life-affirming dimension of Nietzsche’s philosophy in her BA thesis by analyzing the concepts “the Superhuman”, “Will to Power” and “the Eternal Recurrence”. In 2015, she completed her Master’s Degree in Journalism from Aarhus University and the Danish School of Media and Journalism. Her thesis examined war legitimation in political communication.

 

Currently, Sandra is a Visiting Assistant in Research at Yale University where she is a part of a research group in the Center for Cultural Sociology.

 

Publications

Zelinsky, D., Smith, P. and Simonsen, S. Forthcoming. From Remarque to Rubbish: A Model of Literary Degradation. 

Sandra, S. Forthcoming. Collective identity as a cultural explanation for crisis response: The 2015 Migration and Refugee Crisis and the 2020 Covid-19 Pandemic Crisis in Sweden as Cases.

Simonsen, S. 2020. Pigs, Bacteria and Garbage: Metaphors in Jewish Ultra-Orthodox Propaganda. Journal of Language and Politics 19(6). DOI:10.1075/jlp.19109.sim

Simonsen, S. 2019. Discursive Legitimation Strategies: The Evolving Legitimation of War in Israeli Public Diplomacy. Discourse & Society 30(5). DOI:10.1177/0957926519855786

 

Previous work

2015: Communications and project officer in Al-Razi. (Palestinian NGO located in Al-Ram, Jerusalem)

2014: Communications officer in the Danish House in Palestine. (Danish NGO located in Ramallah)

2013: Communications and Press officer at Radikale Venstre (Danish political party then in government

לירון אוחנה-סימצקין

לירון אוחנה
ד"ר
לירון
אוחנה-סימצקין
חוקרת ייצוגים של אופנה בתקשורת
מנחה: פרופ' פול פרוש

I am a PhD candidate in the Department of Communication at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. My doctoral dissertation offers critical examination of different ways in which commercial brands and media corporations appropriate and adapt user-generated ‘amateur’ or ‘vernacular’ aesthetics.

In addition to being fascinated with the corporate use of amateur visual patterns and the different ways in which these phenomenon are important to our understanding of contemporary consumer society and digital culture, I am also a mother of two living in Herzliya, and a creative director at an Israeli public relations firm.

Much like Keith Negus’ illuminating research on the music industry – which started with his own experience as a young, aspiring musician dealing with the uncertainties of a frantic (somewhat chaotic) field, or the work of Laura Grindstaff as an intern on the set of televised talk shows that lead to her investigation of the prime time moments in which guests lose control and expose raw feelings ("The Money Shot"), in my case too work and academic interests continually intersect and influence each other. I find that working with and for commercial companies often serves as inspirational source for future research, and a useful tool in understanding the ‘behind the scenes’ insights of an industry ever on the search for the next big thing.

 

 

Research Interests

Commercial Appropriation

Fashion and advertising

Stock photography

Amateur and vernacular visual patterns

User generated-content

Digital culture

Social media

Consumer culture

 

Selected Publications and Presentation

Simatzkin-Ohana, L. and Frosh, P. (2022) Corporate appropriations of vernacular images on Instagram: from User Generated Content to a User Generated Aesthetic. ​9th European Communication Conference. Denmark (2022).

Simatzkin-Ohana, L. (2022). When Vernacular Style becomes a Corporate Strategy: Who is the 'Self' in Stock- photography Selfies? Visualizing What’s Social Pre-conference 72nd Annual ICA Conference, Paris (2022)

Simatzkin-Ohana, L. and Frosh, P. (2022) From user-generated content to a user-generated aesthetic: Instagram, corporate vernacularization, and the intimate life of brands. Media, Culture & Society, DOI: 10.1177/01634437221084107

Simatzkin-Ohana, L. (2022). When Selfie Culture Meets Commercial Stock Photography: Who is the "Self" in Stock Photography Selfies? Paper presented at Photomedia Conference, Aalto University, Helsinki (2022)

Simatzkin-Ohana, L. and Frosh P. (2021) User-Generated Aesthetic: The Style of Corporate Authenticity. Paper presented at Cultures of Authenticity virtual symposium hosted by Loughborough University

Simatzkin-Ohana, L. and Frosh P. From User-generated Content to a User-generated Aesthetic: Instagram, Brands, and the Appropriation of Digital Photography (2020). AoIR 2020 virtual conference

 

Awards and Prizes

2020: The Smart Doctoral Student Award for Excellence, granted by Mary Smart and the Smart Family Institute of Communications

2017: Outstanding Student Paper, Israel Communication Association, Yuval Shahal Memorial Prize 

2016-2021: Scholarship for Doctoral Students, granted by the Department of Communication and Journalism, Hebrew University of Jerusalem       

2010: Award for Excellence, Department of History and Theory, The Jacob Bar-Gera Award granted by Bezalel Academy of Art and Design Jerusalem