Research & Innovation

How will Palestine benefit from joining international environment group?

With Palestine becoming a member of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), one of the largest environmental groups, Palestinians have realized a long-sought-after achievement in light of Israeli practices that threaten their environment and prevent them from benefitting from their natural resources.

Palestine joined the IUCN — which includes 1,066 nongovernmental and 217 governmental organizations and has observer and consultative status at the United Nations — during the group’s World Conservation Congress held in Hawaii, Aug. 30-Sept. 10. Some 1,000 participants representing governments and organizations and around 10,000 others attended the congress, which focused on IUCN strategic policies for 2017 through 2020.

Imad Atrash, director of the Palestine Wildlife Society in the West Bank, told Al-Monitor that Palestine could not have become a member of the IUCN without UN acknowledgment of it as a nonmember state and acceptance in the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.

[Full article here | Photo by Photo RNW.org]

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The Euro-Mediterranean AGORA is a way to engage the civil society in the institutional and policy dialogue on research and innovation with the aim of becoming an integral part of the decision making and governance processes.

The Agora is an important component of the broader MEDSPRING project, supported by the European Union with the aim of strengthening the Euro-Mediterranean dialogue and cooperation on research and innovation.