Jan 15

Past Event

One Year After Gaza: Securing the Future for Young Palestinians

Event Materials

Video

Highlights

  • James D. Wolfensohn

    Wolfensohn says that the majority of the Palestinians and Israelis want a resolution, but it is up to the leadership to benefit from this window of opportunity and carry it through.

  • James D. Wolfensohn

    Wolfensohn says that the majority of the Palestinians and Israelis want a resolution, but it is up to the leadership to benefit from this window of opportunity and carry it through.

  • Amjad Atallah

    Atallah says the U.S. can do more to help stabilize the situation in Gaza and the Middle East. The administration needs to begin by addressing humanitarian issues in Gaza, he adds.

  • Edward Sayre

    Restrictions on travel and imports, huge surcharges on goods and high unemployment all impair Gaza's economy, frustrate its people and heighten resentment and tension, Sayre says.

  • The Honorable Keith Ellison

    Rep. Ellison says Israel's security is dependent on Palestine's viability and its statehood. He notes that Israel should be strongly encouraged to support a two state option.

Audio

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Summary

One year after the conflict in Gaza, reconstruction of homes and buildings has barely begun, economic development has stagnated, and the humanitarian situation facing the Gazan population remains dire.

On January 15, the Middle East Youth Initiative—a joint project of Brookings’s Wolfensohn Center for Development and the Dubai School of Government—and the New America Foundation hosted a discussion to analyze the prospects for young people growing up in the Palestinian territories, where nearly three-quarters of the population is under the age of 29. What are the implications of these challenges – and of developments over the last year in Gaza and beyond – for American-led peace efforts, Israel, and the region’s security? The panel included Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) and Edward Sayre, a contributor to the Middle East Youth Initiative’s recent book, Generation in Waiting: The Unfulfilled Promise of Young People in the Middle East (Brookings Press, 2009).

Brookings President Strobe Talbott provided opening remarks and led a discussion with James D. Wolfensohn, former president of the World Bank and former special envoy for Gaza disengagement for the Quartet, who reflected on his experiences in the region as special envoy and provided his perspective on current prospects for economic development in the Palestinian territories and the region.

View video of the event on C-SPAN 2 »

Details

January 15, 2010

1:00 PM - 3:00 PM EST

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Opening Remarks

    • Portrait: Strobe Talbott

      Strobe Talbott

      President, The Brookings Institution

      Arms Control Initiative

    • James D. Wolfensohn

      Chairman, Wolfensohn & Company, LLC

  • Panelists

    • Amjad Atallah

      Co-Director, Middle East Task Force, New America Foundation

    • The Honorable Keith Ellison (D-Minn)

      United States House of Representatives

    • Daniel Levy

      Senior Research Fellow, American Strategy Program and Co-Director, Middle East Task Force, New America Foundation

    • Edward Sayre

      Assistant Professor of Political Science, International Development and International Affairs, University of Southern Mississippi

    • Andrew Whitley

      Director, Representative Office of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA)

  • Moderator

    • Jean-Louis Sarbib

      Nonresident Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution