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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Technocratic top-downism that ignores the wishes of people and sociocultural context...,
This review is from: Building a Successful Palestinian State (Paperback)
Planners and development experts suffer from a deserved reputation for technocratic top-downism that ignores the wishes of people and sociocultural context; they are also known for utopian visions disconnected from practical reality. Seldom has that stereotype been more fully fulfilled than in the three complementary RAND studies about a Palestinian state.
Most striking is how the study treats Palestinians as subjects to be studied rather than as actors to participate in the creation of their own state. Blissfully divorced from any discussion about Palestinian social history or the kinds of communities its people have created, the authors happily catalogue advantages and disadvantages of different approaches to developing Palestinian cities. The education chapter, to be fair, does provide a decent account of the existing system, how it evolved, and what Palestinians want, but it is the exception that proves the rule. The analysis also has a head-in-the-clouds character. Chapter after chapter run through the authors' thoughts to create their model society for Palestinians without betraying the slightest hint of awareness that fifty years' experience with international aid has shown the disastrous effect of such an approach. The report makes only a slight passing references to the extraordinary amounts of aid pumped into the Palestinian territories after the 1993 Oslo accords-aid that led to corruption and social distortions which undermined the Palestinian Authority's ability to function effectively. The RAND authors would exacerbate the central problem of Palestinian society-a refusal to take responsibility for itself but instead blaming outsiders for all problems and expecting foreigners to rescue them. Also, a-Cadillac-rather-than-Chevy-approach pervades the study. The authors' point of reference seems to be the infrastructure and facilities characteristic of Europe and North America, not those of low-income, developing countries. Finally, the three volumes (Building a Successful Palestinian State, The Arc: A Formal Structure for a Palestinian State, Helping a Palestinian State Succeed: Key Findings)share the central organizing image of an "arc" formed by a high-speed railroad linking the major population areas of Gaza and the West Bank. There is the minor problem, as the authors note in passing, that roads rather than rail would be used for most freight shipments, for emergency services, and for those who can afford cars (including tourists, dignitaries, and the growing middle class the study envisages). A good road would connect the Palestinian urban areas at a much more modest cost than the billions the authors propose to pour into a railroad, which could quickly turn into a money-losing inefficient public enterprise of the kind which plagues many developing countries. Patrick Clawson
1 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The refusal to face reality,
By Shalom Freedman "Shalom Freedman" (Jerusalem,Israel) - See all my reviews (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Building a Successful Palestinian State (Paperback)
It is wonderful to be idealists as the Rand people are. But their prescriptions for a viable Palestinian state fail to take into account the character of the Palestinian polity, the fundamental ideology which moves the society as a whole. That ideology whether it is advocated by Hamas or by Fatah( And its El Aksa Brigades) is an ideology of hatred and denial. The Palestinians have historically refused five major offers for a state of their own.
They have responded time and time again to offers of peace by Israel, and concrete steps of concession by violence. As I write this it is close to two months after Israel withdrew its forces from Gaza. The Palestinian Authority has still not made any real effort to impose the rule of law on Gaza. The Palestinian media are filled with violent propaganda against Israel. What the people of the Rand Commission do not understand is that the Palestinians are interested in a state not alongside Israel but only in place of it. Whatever withdrawals Israel makes from territory this will not be enough for the Palestinians. And any Palestinian Arab state will not only be a tremendous danger to Israel but a source for increased Terror throughout the Middle East. |
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Building a Successful Palestinian State by Steven N. Simon (Paperback - April 27, 2005)
$35.00 $32.13
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