Leila Farsakh

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Leila Farsakh (born 1967) is a Palestinian Muslim who was born in Jordan and is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at University of Massachusetts Boston.[1] Her area of expertise is Middle East Politics, Comparative Politics, and the Politics of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Farsakh holds a MPhil from the University of Cambridge, UK (1990) and a PhD from the University of London (2003).[1]

Farsakh conducted post-doctoral research at Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies, and is also a research affiliate at the Center for International Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[1]

She has worked with a number of organizations, including the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in Paris (1993 - 1996) and the Palestine Economic Policy Research Institute in Ramallah (1998 - 1999).[2]

In 2001 she won the Peace and Justice Award from the Cambridge Peace Commission in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[2]

Farsakh is the Project Director for Jerusalem 2050, a problem-solving project jointly sponsored by Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Department of Urban Studies and Planning and the Center for International Studies.[3] She has written extensively on issues related to the Palestinian economy and the Oslo peace process, international migration and regional integration.[3]

Farsakh is also part of the staff at the non-governmental organization RESIST, founded in 1967 to provide grant money and support to grassroots movements advocating for social change. [4]

Farsakh is married to Franz-Josef Ulm, a professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at MIT. They have a daughter named Selma Farsakh Ulm.[5]


Contents

[edit] Interview

[edit] Published works

[edit] Books (partial list):

  • Palestinian Labour Migration to Israel: Labour, Land, and Occupation (2005). Taylor & Francis Ltd, United Kingdom. ISBN 0415333563.[6]
  • North African Labour Flows and the Euro-Med partnership (1999). Part of the series: Europe and the South in the 21th century : Challenges for Renewed Cooperation. Paris : EADI.
  • Palestinian Employment in Israel: 1967-1997 (1998). Ramallah.

[edit] Articles (partial list):

[edit] Public Lectures

  • "Palestinian Labor Flow to Israel: Is it Over?", at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University, 19 February 2002.[8]

[edit] References