Sam Bahour
سام بحّور
Born: Youngstown, Ohio, United States
Domain: Business & Entrepreneurship
Recognition: REGIONAL
Biography
Sam Bahour is a Palestinian-American entrepreneur and business-development consultant based in Al-Bireh, near Ramallah, who has played a notable role in building key institutions of the post-Oslo Palestinian private sector. Born in Youngstown, Ohio, in 1964 to a Palestinian father and a Lebanese-American mother, he holds a degree in computer technology from Youngstown State University and an executive MBA from a joint program of Northwestern University's Kellogg School and Tel Aviv University. Following the Oslo Accords in the 1990s, Bahour relocated to the West Bank to help develop the economy of a future Palestinian state. He was a key figure in establishing the Palestine Telecommunications Company (PALTEL), the publicly traded telecom that expanded phone and internet services across the territories under severe infrastructural constraints, and a central institution of the Palestinian capital market. He also helped found the Arab Palestinian Shopping Centers (APSC), a publicly listed company that brought modern retail development to Palestinian cities. Through his consulting practice, Applied Information Management (AIM), Bahour has advised on business development, the IT sector, and startups, working to strengthen the Palestinian private sector and connect it to international markets. Beyond his ventures, Bahour is one of the most widely published Palestinian voices on the political economy of occupation. As a policy adviser to Al-Shabaka, the Palestinian Policy Network, and a frequent contributor to international outlets, he argues that economic development cannot be separated from the political conditions of occupation — a stance that has made him a prominent and sometimes contrarian commentator on Palestinian state-building. His combination of practical entrepreneurship and analytical writing has given him an unusual dual standing: a builder of Palestinian companies and a leading critic of the limits placed on them. He is frequently cited in academic, policy, and journalistic discussions of the Palestinian economy.
Why This Person Matters
Bahour helped build flagship Palestinian companies like PALTEL while becoming one of the most cited analysts of the Palestinian economy, embodying the link between private-sector building and the politics of occupation.