Holocaust Education in America

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Alabama Education
Alabama Holocaust Commission history
Category=NHTZ1
Comparative state politics education
Curriculum development in public schools
Education policy researchers
Educational policy and Holocaust studies
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Florida Education
forthcoming
Holocaust education commissions
Holocaust education in Florida schools
Holocaust education mandates by state
Human rights education legislation
Institutionalizing Holocaust memory
Jewish Studies pedagogy
Legislation of Holocaust history
Michigan Education
Michigan Holocaust education mandate
Political science of education
Politics of history education in US
Regional pedagogy American schools
Resources for Holocaust educators
School board curriculum guides
South Carolina Education
State-mandated Holocaust education
West Virginia Education

Product details

  • ISBN 9781682833230
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Texas A & M University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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While Holocaust education is a staple of American schooling, it is rarely studied as a product of the political machine. We often focus on what happens in the classroom, yet the path to those lessons begins years earlier in state legislatures and governors' offices.

This essential volume explores the development of Holocaust education in America from the early 1980s to the present. By shifting the focus from pedagogy to politics, this anthology analyzes the rise of two crucial state instruments: Holocaust education mandates and Holocaust education commissions. With contributions both from leading scholars and from those who have served on commissions or drafted mandate legislation, this collection investigates how twenty-seven states came to require Holocaust education and how seventeen states established bodies to oversee it.

From states as disparate as Alabama and Michigan to the recent politicization of education in Florida, these case studies reveal how legislatures, departments of education, and the classroom are inextricably linked. This volume is a pathbreaking resource for scholars of Jewish studies, political scientists, and anyone interested in how our most sensitive history is institutionalized in our public schools.

Jason Schulman is an instructor in history at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York. He has also taught at New York University and John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He serves on the editorial board of Western States Jewish History and AJS Perspectives. He was a 2025 Fulbright Scholar to Australia. He earned his PhD from Emory University in 2014.