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Middle East Leaders

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Monday, December 18, 2006
Maxwell School to
Host 25 Emerging Leaders from Middle East Under New State Department Initiative
Under a program funded by the U. S. Department of State’s
Middle East Partnership Initiative, 25 emerging leaders from 15 countries in the
Middle East are headed to the United States for a month-long fellowship at the
Maxwell School of Syracuse University. The Middle Eastern fellows will study the
foundations of democracy before participating in a three-month skill-building
internship, either in Central New York or Washington, DC. The participants, men
and women ranging in age from 25 to 40, will return to their home countries with
new knowledge and skills to help foster positive democratic change.
While at the Maxwell School in February 2007, the fellows
–- representing Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Oman,
the Palestinian territories, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, UAE, and Yemen
–- will participate in classes, lectures, panel discussions, and simulations.
The academic program will focus on comparative politics and the development of
democratic institutions; leading and managing the democratic state; and
citizenship, private action, and private enterprise. The internships will
provide the opportunity for participants to work in organizations that match
their professional interests and provide a grassroots view of democracy in
action.
“The Maxwell School has endeavored in the past few years to
create new relationships and programs in the Middle East, and we are honored
that the State Department has chosen us from among dozens of other educational
institutions to launch this important effort,” according to Maxwell’s Dean
Mitchel Wallerstein.
The group of fellows includes journalists, diplomats, political candidates,
human resources experts, and representatives of non-governmental organizations
and think tanks. One is an architect and a member of the Egyptian Green Party,
one an HIV/AIDS specialist working in Lebanon for the United National
Development Programme, one a journalist who founded a news and media watchdog
web site in Yemen, one a curricula specialist in the Bahraini Ministry of
Education, and one a human rights activist from Iraq.
Responding to news of the award, Congressman Jim Walsh
said, "Congratulations to Syracuse University and the Maxwell School. The Middle
East Partnership Initiative will no doubt get a huge boost from Maxwell's
unparalleled expertise in public administration, democracy and good governance,
and I look forward to welcoming the impressive group of participants to Central
New York."
The Leaders for Democracy Fellowship Program is part of the
State Department’s Middle East Partnership Initiative, launched in 2002 to
support democracy promotion, economic reform, quality education, and women’s
empowerment in the Middle East. The initiative has invested more than $293
million in 4 years in more than 350 programs in 16 countries and the Palestinian
territories.
# # #
The Maxwell School
of Syracuse University is the premier academic institution in the United
States committed to scholarship, civic leadership, and education in public and
international affairs. Maxwell is home to Syracuse University’s social science
departments and to numerous nationally recognized multidisciplinary graduate
programs in public policy, international studies, social policy, and conflict
resolution. Maxwell's graduate program in public administration -- the first of
its kind in the nation -- is ranked consistently the leading graduate public
affairs program in the country.
Contact:
Jill
Leonhardt,
director of communications, (315) 443-5492;
jlleonha@maxwell.syr.edu.
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