1. Bernard Avishai is an adjunct professor of Business at Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

1. Bernard Avishai is an adjunct professor of Business at Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Bernard Avishai has taught at Duke University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Dartmouth College, and was director of the Zell Entrepreneurship Program at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya in Israel.
Bernard Avishai has written many articles and commentaries for The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, Harvard Business Review, Harper's Magazine and other publications.
Bernard Avishai is the author of three books on Israel, including the widely read The Tragedy of Zionism, and the 2008 The Hebrew Republic.
Bernard Avishai's reports anticipated the 1977 election that brought Menachem Begin and the Israeli right to power for a generation.
Bernard Avishai moved to Boston in 1980, where he taught humanities at MIT, and joined Dissent magazine's editorial board.
Bernard Avishai's first book, The Tragedy of Zionism, was published in 1985 to considerable controversy, since it suggested that Israel's occupation was a symptom of a democracy plagued by anachronistic Zionist institutions and ideas.
Bernard Avishai there took up a position as an editor of Harvard Business Review.
Bernard Avishai was Visiting Professor at the Fuqua School of Business and Senior Fellow at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University, where he taught courses on the new economy and public policy.
Today, Bernard Avishai serves as a visiting professor specializing in political economy at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire.
Bernard Avishai brought to publication dozens of articles on computer-based manufacturing, the implications of burgeoning information networks, and globalization.
Bernard Avishai then joined Monitor Group as its head of product development, and became International Director of Intellectual Capital at KPMG LLP in 1998.
Bernard Avishai remains active as a consultant associated with Monitor Group, and has taught entrepreneurial business planning in Libya and other places under its auspices.