2019 Iraq Public Leadership Program directed by Dr. Yass al-Khafaji |
In its seventh year, the Iraq Pubic Leadership Program
(IPLP) trains young Iraqi middle-career managers, NGO, and think tank members, and government employees over a period of 10 months in principles of social entrepreneurship, impact
investing, rule of law, and conflict resolution strategies. Most important of all, it helps develop critical thinking skills. I was privileged to have been invited to
participate in this year’s IPLP which
included 30 remarkable Iraqi youth leaders.
In what ways does the IPLP help improve economic and social
conditions in Iraq? Specifically, what
hope does it offer Iraqi youth, many of whom are unemployed and have little
hope in the future?
With 70% of Iraq’s population under the age of 30, the
country’s “youth bulge” is not expected reach a more “normal” demographic distribution
much before 2050. Considering that Iraq derives
97% of its foreign revenues from the sale of oil, and that the oil industry accounts for
only 1% of employment, clearly hydrocarbon production cannot address the
problem of unemployment.
With the Federal Government in Baghdad and the Kurdish Regional Government
(KRG) accounting for 65% of national employment, it is easy to understand why
the focus of young people is obtaining a government job. In their view, the relatively low salaries they receive are offset by having lifetime employment and a guaranteed pension.
Still, the public sector, which was established after the
1958 coup which overthrew the Hashimite monarchy, is highly inefficient and
unable to generate new jobs. As the
number of youth graduating from secondary schools and universities continues to grow, the public sector - which
currently accounts for 4 of every 5 new jobs created – will be unable to keep pace with the number of youth entering the employment market each year.
As an example of the efforts of Iraqi youth who were participants in this year's IPLP, one group of 3
began a school in a poor neighborhood of Baghdad where they offer classes for
$5 per month (or free if the student’s family can’t afford the fee) in which K-12 youth, who are mostly from single parent homes or orphans, learn how to
read and write Arabic and English and mathematics. The school organizers, who all have regular government
positions, in the Ministry of Oil, the Ministry of Education and secondary
school system, use their own salaries to finance the school.
Dr. Yass al-Khafai, Dr. Sameh al-Muqdadi and Eric Davis |
A member of the IPLP presents a project which offers education to poor children and orphans in Baghdad |
There is great concern among young Iraqis with environmental
protection. The air quality in parts of
the country is unhealthy, such as in the southern port city of Basra, due to the
flaring of natural gas, the lack of environmental standards for controlling automobile
exhaust levels, and the need for countless generators to assure access to electricity
which is only sporadically provided by the state-operated grid.
Thus, there was concern among many of the IPLP participants with recycling waste and finding ways to make it profitable in the
process. This idea isn’t new. When I visited the KRG in 2004, I found a
large recycling company run by a prominent Kurdish businessman and an Iraqi
engineer from the city of Tikrit. When I
asked whether their different ethnic origins influenced their work, they were
surprised, saying that theirs was a profit-making enterprise, that they were unconcerned with their respective ethnic origins, and that they were proud they employed 25 youth in each of their recycling centers.
In my effort to provide assistance to the youth social
entrepreneurs, I offered three PPT presentations. The first, “Iraq’s Civilizational
Contributions to the World,” was based on the assumption that effective social
entrepreneurs need to feel a strong tie to and pride in their country. Social entrepreneurship
needs to be grounded in inspiration. Having
heard from many Iraqi youth interested in engaging in commercial enterprises
that Iraq has no entrepreneurial tradition, I felt that a review of its historical
contributions was essential.
I offered what I called three educational modules which
touched on different forms of historical memory designed to provide examples that Iraqis have, historically,
been actively involved in wide ranging trade which in turn created great
prosperity and stimulated innovation.
My presentation: "Iraq's Civilizational Contributions to the World" |
Hammurabi created the first concept of a contract. Another contribution was developing the first language in the form of
cuneiform. These developments were
stimulated by the extensive trade Sumer established with far away regions which required merchants
to create forms of notation which would allow them to keep track of their
products. Beginning in ancient
Mesopotamia, the peoples of the Fertile Crescent already had developed a strong entrepreneurial spirit.
Innovation was certainly a characteristic of the early Abbasid
Empire – the second educational module. During the early 800s CE, the Caliph al-Ma’mun was a ruler who was curious and fascinated by the
acquisition of knowledge. It is well known that he sent his advisors to the far
corners of the empire, including to southeastern Europe, to bring back all
known knowledge of the world and have it translated and deposited in a new
library-university called the Bayt al-Hikma (House of Wisdom).
The third module focused on the Iraqi nationalist movement
between 1908 and 1963. This period is bracketed by the 1908 Young Turk Revolt in the
Ottoman Empire which deposed the Sultan and the first Bacthist coup
in February 1963 which overthrew the regime of General 'Abd al-Karim Qasim. As I document in my study, Memories of State: Politics, History and Collective Identity in Modern
Iraq, the Iraqi nationalist movement, which preceded Bacthist
rule, was viewed as highly threatening by Saddam Husayn, leading him to create
the Project for the Rewriting of History (Mashruca
Icadat Kitabat al-Tarikh) of which he was president.
What Saddam found threatening was precisely the values which characterized the pre-Bacthist era. In its cross-ethnic nature, the nationalist movement reflected the overwhelmingly peaceful interaction of Iraq’s ethnic and religious groups and the lack of hostility between them. The period of the nationalist movement was characterized by a large and vigorous press and there was widespread associational behavior in the form of professional syndicates (al-niqabat al-mihaniya), large labor unions, women’s and student organizations, and programmatic (non-elite) political parties, e.g., the Iraqi Communist Party and the National Democratic Party.
An IPLP ream works on developing a solar energy start-up |
Indeed, parliamentary elections were held between 1925 and
1958. While parliaments were continually
dissolved by the dominant political elite at the time, and rural elections were
controlled by tribal shaykhs, elections which I studied in many urban districts were fair and
free.
A member of an IPLP team presenting 1 of the 2 proposed solar energy projects |
However, as I argued at the IPLP, and everyone agreed, there is a strong
correlation between a tolerant political culture, democratic governance and
social justice in the form of government services and economic development and
prosperity.
Thus, when asking the group to discuss possible social
entrepreneurial ventures, one suggestion I made was the creation of an
educational website which secondary school teachers and university professors could use to develop lesson plans for civic
education (al-tarbiya al-wataniya). A non-political site, in the sense that it
would avoid discussions of contemporary politics, it would instead offer
analytic discussions of concepts such as pluralism, tolerance, respect for
religious and cultural diversity, gender equality, personal freedoms, human
rights and social democracy.
An IPLP team discusses developing a profitable recycling start-up in Baghdad |
The final project which we discussed was that of a franchise
developed by Iraqi women to provide nursery schools where women could feel secure leaving their children
while they went to work. In many Arab
countries, women constitute 70% of the undergraduate student population in universities but a
relatively small percentage of the national work force.
In some parts of the Arab world, such as in Egypt, women have obtained micro-loans made to groups of 4 or 5 borrowers. The
default rates on these loans is very low, usually less than 1%. I suggested to the IPLP group that this model
could be employed in Iraq as a business model whereby a group of women in Iraq
could fund such a franchise. The nursery
schools could provide children with health care information, promote manual
dexterity through supplying them with crayons and pencils and even teach them
rudimentary computer skills.
An IPLP team presents a short play on the difficulties facing would-be social entrepreneurs as part of the bricolage exercise |
At the IPLP, there was discussion of The Station (al-Mahatta), a relatively new incubator in Baghdad which has played an important role in promoting ventures of young Iraqi social entrepreneurs. The incubator combines the talent of young Iraqis interested in conjoining technology and design, with the support of established Iraqi entrepreneurs who seek to help the younger generation develop a private sector which will contribute to the betterment of Iraqi society. Along with the IPLP, The Station is yet another sign of the social entrepreneurial energy of Iraq's "generation in waiting."
https://the-station.iq/
The Station incubator, Baghdad |
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