Israel-Palestine: real estate factor

Program Director Alaa Tartir discusses the current round of peace talks with Gershon Baskin, founder of the Israeli Palestinian Center of Research and Information, and Dr. George Giacaman, Co-Founder and General Director of The Palestinian Institute for the Study of Democracy in Ramallah. Tartir argues that “real estate projects” are a product of the economic peace paradigm and an excellent example for the corrupted marriage between economy and politics. “Having these projects on the agenda of the peace talks illustrates the low ceiling of such talks and why Palestinian people don’t subscribe to them … Building a nation does not happen through building a real estate project.”

The peace talks and Palestinian representation: in conversation with Osamah Khalil

After much political drama and media fanfare, US Secretary of State John Kerry’s efforts to rekindle “peace talks” between Israel and Palestine finally commenced this week with a meeting in Washington D.C. between the Israeli justice minister, Tzipi Livni, and Palestinian chief negotiator, Saeb Erekat.

Are Palestinian Industrial Parks Illusion or Real Development?

“‘The whole economic peace idea … is to provide economic solutions to political problems,’ said Alaa Tartir … [who authored] a study on the Japanese-funded Agro-Industrial Park in Jericho [as well as a commentary for Al-Shabaka]. ‘Historical evidence suggests, and actual facts on the ground suggest, that such a model, while it could achieve very short-term successes, is very distorting at the long-term level. It helps in distorting Palestinian life and economy and normalizes the occupation, rather than end the occupation,’ Tartir said.

Searching for new Palestinian vision (Ψάχνοντας για νέο Παλαιστινιακό όραμα)

Translated from Greek: “At a time when … negotiations can not seem to accomplish anything more than to perpetuate the status quo, Palestinians need to change the paradigm that has defined their conflict with Israel over the last two decades. This emerged recently during a roundtable at ECFR by Nadia Hijab, co-founder and director of Al-Shabaka.”

What future for the Palestinian National Movement? (Audio)

At a time when the two-state solution is experiencing what could be its last agonising convulsions and with negotiations seemingly unable to achieve anything other than perpetuating the status quo, Palestinians need to shift the current paradigm that has framed the conflict with Israel over the last two decades. This was recently highlighted during an ECFR roundtable with Nadia Hijab.

Palestinians say there’s oil in West Bank

Al-Shabaka Policy Advisor Victor Kattan tells UPI of documents pointing to Israel’s possible exploitation of an oil field near Ramallah within the occupied Palestinian territories, and to the possible existence of two other oil fields near Qalqiliya and another near Hebron.

Analyses of Israeli apartheid are ever more crucial

Ben White cites the author of Al-Shabaka’s recent policy brief, ‘Beyond South Africa: Understanding Israeli Apartheid’: “Samer Abdelnour argues that ‘the specific characteristics of Israel’s unique brand of apartheid need to be better understood in order to successfully dismantle it’ and thus ‘identifies three inter-locking dimensions of Israeli apartheid: physical, architecture, and ideological.’ Writing that Israeli apartheid is ‘far more sophisticated than that of South Africa,’ Abdelnour warns that the serious consequences of misunderstanding the Israeli regime could include ‘hinder[ing] thoughtful assessment and critique of existing strategies (such as BDS), and prevent[ing] the development of new strategies for securing Palestinian freedom and return.’ Abdelnour’s brief is an important one to read and digest, and highlights smartly the relationship between analysis and response.”

Salam Fayyad’s resignation as Palestinian premier seen as blow to peace plan

Al-Shabaka cofounder Nadia Hijab quoted on Salaam Fayyad’s resignation: “‘Abbas-Fayyad relations have been tense for years but Fayyad had to be kept on as prime minister to keep Western donors happy,’ said Nadia Hijab, the director of al Shabaka, a Palestinian policy research center. But many blamed the same policies that kept the United States and other Western countries happy for the dismal economy in the Palestinian-ruled West Bank. Hijab said Fayyad’s policies were blamed ‘for multiplying the deprivation of the 46-year Israeli occupation.’ The policies were ‘especially unpopular’ among members of the Fatah movement, which had enjoyed years of patronage and is the base of Abbas’ support.”

Palestine’s PM Resigns

VIDEO: Al-Shabaka co-founder Osamah Khalil gets to the bottom of Salaam Fayyad’s resignation as Palestinian prime minister and tackles the real issues.