Prime Minister of Palestine (2019–2024)
, Geneva in June, 2019. Shtayyeh was appointed prime minister in March 2019, and took office on 13 April. During his premiership, he has pursued peace negotiations between
Hamas, which
de facto controls the
Gaza Strip, and the Palestinian central government in the
West Bank. When heads of state from the 55-member
African Union met for a two-day summit in February 2022, Shtayyeh urged the African Union to remove Israel's observer status. On 26 February 2024, in the midst of the ongoing
Gaza war and its
spillover in the West Bank, Shtayyeh announced he would resign, citing dissatisfaction with the current situation in the region and the need for "new governmental and political arrangements" as well as the full extension of Palestinian Authority control over the
Palestinian territories. Shtayyeh further underlined unity and consensus between different Palestinian groups had become more urgent in the light of the
ongoing genocide and starvation in the
Gaza Strip. He remained in office as
caretaker prime minister until President
Mahmoud Abbas appointed
Mohammad Mustafa as his replacement who was sworn in on 31 March 2024. ==Boards and Commissions==
Boards and Commissions
• President, Board of Trustees, Arab American University,
Jenin • Member, Board of Trustees, Al-Quds University,
Jerusalem • Member, Board of Trustees,
Al Najah University,
Nablus • Member, Board of Palestinian Academy for Security Sciences of Alistiqlal University • Member, Board of Trustees of Middle East Nonviolence Association • Member, Palestinian Development Fund • Member, National Committee for Voluntary Work • Founding member, Palestine Housing Council • President, Board of Palestinian Economists Association • Advisory Board, Information and Communication Committee, Office of the President • Head, Syria Relief Campaign 2012 ==Publications==
Publications
• AlMokhtasar Fi Tareekh Falastin, Dar Alshorouk Beirut 2015 (in Arabic) • Israeli Settlements and the Erosion of the Two- States Solution. Dar Alshorouk Beirut 2015 • Gaza Strip Reconstruction and Development plan, PECDAR, 2014. • Jerusalem Strategic Development plan, PECDAR, 2013. • The Palestinian Economy in the Transitional Period. PECDAR, 3d ed., 2010, 2011. • A Jerusalem Developmental Vision, PECDAR, 2010. • The Encyclopedia of Palestinian Terms and Concepts, Palestinian Center for Regional Studies, 2009. • Ikleel Men Shawk (Wreath of Thorns) Arab Scientific Publishers. Beirut, 2009. Collection of short stories. • The Economies of Islamic Waqf in the Lands of the Palestinian Authority, (with Abdul Aziz Douri & Nael Mousa), PECDAR, 1st ed. 2000 (Arabic) and 2nd ed. 2006 (Arabic). • Housing Policy in Palestine, Ministry of Public Works & Housing, Ramallah, 2006. • ''Israel's Disengagement from the Gaza Strip'', (with Tim Sheehi & Eyad Ennab), PECDAR, 2006. • Palestine: Country Profile, PECDAR, 2006. • Editor, Vision for Palestine, PECDAR, Jerusalem, 2005. • Editor, Municipalities and Local Government Units in Palestine – Establishment, Function and its Role in Economic Development, PECDAR, Jerusalem, 2004. • Editor, The Islamic Movements in the Middle East. Palestinian Center for Regional Studies. Al-Bireh, 2000. • The Future of the Jewish Settlements. Palestinian Center for Regional Studies, Al-Bireh, 2000. • Israel in the Region: Conflict, Hegemony, or Cooperation, Palestinian Center for Regional Studies, Al-Bireh, 1998. • Private-Sector Credits: Donor Assistance, PECDAR, Jerusalem, 1998. • The Politics of the Middle East Development Bank, Palestinian Center for Regional Studies, Al-Bireh, 1998. • Palestine: Building the Foundation of Economic Growth, PECDAR, 1st ed. 1987 and 2nd ed. 1998. • Editor, The Benelux: A Paradigm for the Middle East? Palestinian Center for Regional Studies. Al-Bireh, 1998. • Editor, Scenarios on the Future of Jerusalem. Palestinian Center for Regional Studies. Al-Bireh, 1998. • Editor, Labor Migration in the Middle East. Palestinian Center for Regional Studies. Al-Bireh, 1997. • A’naba: A Palestinian Destroyed Village, Birzeit University, Research Center, 1992. • The Israeli Immigration and Colonial Settlements: A Zero-sum Situation?, Peter Demand, ed., The Dynamics of Self-Determination. The Hague, 1991. • Ein Karem: A Palestinian Destroyed Village, Birzeit University, Research Center, 1982. ==Awards==