The Assistance to the Palestinian People Unit (APPU) was established in 1985, with a specific mandate to monitor and investigate the social and economic impact of policies of the Israeli occupation authorities in the Palestinian territory.
The establishment of APPU crowned the secretariat´s pioneering work on the Palestinian economy which commenced in 1979 upon the request of member States.
This makes UNCTAD the first international organization to systematically examine the Palestinian economy´s multifaceted development predicament.
Drawing on the secretariat´s global mandate, APPU has been actively responding to official requests for technical assistance by Palestinian public and civil society institutions, thereby positioning itself as a focal point for the interrelated treatment of Palestinian trade, finance and economic development.
UNCTAD´s work on the Palestinian economy is centred on the secretariat´s three main interrelated pillars of activities:
Research and analysis
Technical cooperation
- Supporting intergovernmental consensus-building in this area of work
Activities under each pillar respond to the evolving needs of the Palestinian people within four programmatic clusters:
Development strategies and trade policies
Trade facilitation and logistics
Public finance modernization and reform
- Enterprise, investment and competition
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In accordance with the relevant resolutions and decisions of the United Nations General Assembly and Security Council, references in this Web site to the Occupied Palestinian Territory (or occupied Palestinian territories) pertain to the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. |
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08 May 2013Palestinian economy in east Jerusalem left in ''development limbo'' under Israeli occupation, says UNCTAD ReportThe Palestinian economy in East Jerusalem has been progressively isolated and constricted and now wields less than half of the economic influence that it had in 1993, a new UNCTAD report says. A disabling economic environment, high and rising rates of poverty, faltering industry and services, restricted investment, housing shortages, and inferior social and municipal services all combine to create hardship for the city's Palestinian inhabitants and to stifle their economy's potential, the report contends. 09 October 2012UNCTAD trains Palestinian Authority staff on UN system in GenevaTwo staff members from the Palestinian Authority's Ministry of the National Economy have completed an UNCTAD training programme designed to familiarize them with the activities of UNCTAD and the work of other United Nations agencies in Geneva. Page 4 of 8, items 16 to 20 of 40 |
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