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YaLa - Young Leaders
FoundedMay 24, 2011
FounderPeres Center for Peace and YaLa Palestine
TypeNGO
Focus
Location
Area served
MENA region
Method
  • Dialogue
  • People-to-people interaction
  • Capacity building
  • Youth cooperation
  • Business and economic cooperation
  • Humanitarian response
Members
Nearly 1 Million
Employees
11-50
Volunteers
5
Websitewww.yalayl.org

YaLa - Young Leaders (/ˈjɑːlɑː/ YAA-laa, Arabic: يالا - يا قادة الشباب, ’Yālā - yā qādh al-sha‘bāb, Hebrew: יאללה - מנהיגים צעירים, Yallh - menheygeym tes'eyeryem) is a Facebook-based, online social movement located in Tel Aviv, Israel. The movement was founded in May 2011 as a joint partnership between the Peres Center for Peace and YaLa Palestine and is administered by former Israeli peace negotiator and honorary president of the Peres Center for Peace Uri Savir.[1] YaLa's aim is to promote dialogue and engagement among its predominantly youth, middle eastern membership through a variety of educational programs, collaborative projects, and group discussions.[2]

The Organisation's name is both a pseudo-acronym, where the first and third letters are the initial letters of the words following the hyphen, and a romanization of the common Arabic expression Yala.

Overview/Mission/Activities

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YaLa has been described as one of the broadest and fastest-growing peace movement in the Middle East.[3][4] It is also known as one of a few visible initiatives that, at grassroots level, use Social media as a platform to promote cross-community dialogue and peacebuilding, with a focus on peaceful discussions and exchange of ideas between Israelis and Palestinians. The organization receives funding from the Peres Center for Peace, the United States Agency for International Development, and the Clinton Foundation.[5]

The YaLa New Media & Citizen Journalism program, which is part of YaLa's flagship program YaLa Academy focuses on encouraging communication and engagement from participants across the MENA as part of a four-months-long online training course to citizen journalism.[6]

Educational Objectives

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Storytelling as a teaching/leadership tool

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Groups of political activists or community activists who work for peace through efforts based on political goals and measures, or community efforts. Includes some groups which are composed of activists from one side of the conflict, and some groups which include activists from both sides.

Programs

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YaLa Academy

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From http://yalaacademy.org/faqs/ WHAT IS THE YALA ACADEMY? The YaLa Academy is not a traditional university or institute of higher education, rather it focuses on the added-value of using online technology to empower a diverse group of young Middle Easterners to promote peace and positive change in the region. In this light, it aims to supplement traditional higher education, rather than replace it, and its programs take place fully online, thus allowing young people from any village, town, city and country anywhere in the Middle East – Israelis and Arabs alike – to study together in the same place. The YaLa Academy is the main program of the YaLa Young Leaders movement of nearly 1 million youth from across the Middle East, a movement that was co-founded by the Peres Center for Peace and YaLa Palestine in May 2011. Additionally, the YaLa Academy works in cooperation with YaLa’s sister movement, YaLa Africa, to involve students from countries across Africa in our training programs.

Aileen Getty School of Citizen Journalism

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The YaLa Academy’s Aileen Getty School of Citizen Journalism brings together leading journalists and new media experts to train Middle Eastern and African youth in basic journalism techniques, photo- and video-journalism and 21st Century activism. Building upon an initiative launched in 2014 in partnership with the U.S. Institute of Peace, this online program is a unique combination of new media training and peacebuilding experience. In regions where media is too often a tool for nationalism, division and fear, YaLa citizen journalists are being empowered to express themselves and tell a very different kind of story.

The YaLa Peace Institute in Honor of Nelson Mandela

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The YaLa Peace Institute in Honor of Nelson Mandela is a ground-breaking peace studies program to supply the young leaders of the Middle East & North Africa (MENA) region with the necessary tools to create a future of self-sustaining and durable peace.

Students learn online directly from the men and women who led processes of peace negotiation, human rights, transitional justice, peacebuilding and reconciliation in South Africa, Rwanda, Ireland, the Balkans and the Middle East (click here for the list). Find out more by clicking here for the Overview, clicking here for the FAQs or checking out the final project created by some of students here. And sign up for the next cycle in Fall 2016 here!

MENA Leaders for Change Program

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The MENA Leaders for Change Program, sponsored by the U.S. State Department. This intensive program for emerging peace leaders consisted of online training and face-to-face workshops in collaboration with the US Institute of Peace, Vanderbilt University and the Harvard Program on Negotiation. Over the course of two years (four semesters), a total of 330 young leaders from the MENA region participated in the program:

YaLa Press

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blah blah blah

YaLa Africa

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Dude, just google “yala africa”: the YaLa Academy works in cooperation with YaLa’s sister movement, YaLa Africa, to involve students from countries across Africa in our training programs… blah blah blah

YaLa Africa Press

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See https://yalaafricapress.wordpress.com/

Controversy/Criticism

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Membership statistics

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The movement has claimed the number of its members to be nearly one million. It is, however, difficult to reliable confirm this. Since YaLa has never released any other figures, this estimation can only be based on the number of likes on the Organization's official Facebook page.

Slacktivism

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Boycott campaign/Normalization Initiative

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blah blah blah[7]

Awards

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  • The 2006 IIE Victor J. Goldberg Prize for Peace in the Middle East was awarded to Sarah Perle Benazera and Ohood Murqaten, Co-Chairs of the YaLa Young Leaders Core Leadership Group.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Author Profil of Uri Savir", Al-Monitor, Feb 25, 2018
  2. ^ Aaron David Miller, "YaLa Young Leaders - How a Facebook organization could transform the Middle East.", Foreign Policy, Apr 24, 2013
  3. ^ https://www.iie.org/Why-IIE/Announcements/2016-06-02-IIE-Goldberg-Prize-2016
  4. ^ https://thediplo-sphere.org/2018/01/18/yala-young-leaders-the-middle-east-and-north-africas-broadest-and-fastest-growing-peace-movement/
  5. ^ Ozerdem, Alpaslan; Thiessen, Chuck; Qassoum, Mufid (2016). Conflict Transformation and the Palestinians: The Dynamics of Peace and Justice Under Occupation. Taylor & Francis. p. 158. ISBN 9781317213635. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
  6. ^ "Workshop for young citizen journalists from Israel and Palestine organized with the support of UNAOC’s Youth Solidarity Fund", United Nations Alliance of Civilizations, July 29, 2016
  7. ^ The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic & Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI), "Boycott YaLa-Young Leaders Group and Its Online Normalization Conferences", PACBI, May 25, 2014
  8. ^ "IIE Awards 2016 Victor J. Goldberg Prize Winners", Institute of International Education, June 2, 2016
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Category:Internet-based activism Category:Internet activism Category:social movement Category:Non-governmental organizations involved in the Israeli–Palestinian peace process Category:Israeli–Palestinian peace process Category:Peace organizations Category:Middle East Category:Middle East peace efforts