Here is your PDF: Strengthening Palestinian Public Institutions ; Keywords: council task force policy foreign relations through

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Cree Frappier

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2019-02-19 10:35:32.324090

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Independent Task Force Report Strengthening Palestinian Public Institutions Sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations Michel Rocard, Chairman Henry Siegman, Project Director Yezid Sayigh and Khalil Shikaki, Principal Authors The Council on Foreign Relations acknowledges with gratitude the generous financial support given to this project by the European Commission and the government of Norway. The Council on Foreign Relations, Inc., a nonprofit, nonpartisan national membership organization founded in 1921, is dedicated to promoting understanding of international affairs through the free and civil exchange of ideas. The Council’s members are dedicated to the belief that America’s peace and prosperity are firmly linked to that of the world. From this flows the Council™s mission: to foster America’s understanding of other nationsŠ their peoples, cultures, histories, hopes, quarrels, and ambitions Šand thus to serve our nation through study and debate, private and public. THE COUNCIL TAKES NO INSTITUTIONA L POSITION ON POLICY ISSUES AND HAS NO AFFILIATION WITH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT . ALL STATEMENTS OF FACT AND EXPRESSIONS OF OPINION CO NTAINED IN ALL ITS PUBLICATIONS ARE THE SOLE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE AUTHOR OR AUTHORS. The Council on Foreign Relations will sponsor an Independent Task Force when (1) an issue of current and critical important to U.S. fore ign policy arises, and (2) it seems that a group diverse in backgrounds and perspectives may, nonetheless, be able to reach a meaningful consensus on a policy through private and nonpartisan deliberations. Typically, a Task Force meets between two and five times over a brief period to ensure the relevance of its work. Upon reaching a conclusion, a Task Force issues a report, and the Council publishes its text and posts it on the Council website. Task Force Reports can take three forms: (1) a strong and meaningful policy consensus, with Task Force members endorsing the general policy thrust and judgments reached by the group, though not necessarily every finding and recommendation; (2) a report stating the various policy positions, each as sharply and fairly

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