Within the framework of sustainability in economic development.. University of Basrah holds a symposium on "The Development Path" and its effects on the Iraqi reality The Development and Training Center at University of Basrah, in cooperation with the Al-Warith Academy for Economic Development and Strategic Studies, the Holy Shrine of Imam Hussein, held a symposium entitled "The Development Path and its Effects on the Iraqi Reality", where Dr. Shukri Al-Abadi, Director of the Student Affairs and Registration Department, represented the President of the University of Basrah. The mission of the symposium was to discuss the ways of the success of the "Development Path" in Iraq, its inclusion and its repercussions on various aspects of life, including the economic and social fields. The symposium, in which an elite group of holy shrines, experts and independent researchers in the fields of economic, social and strategic development at University of Basrah participated, was attended by Dr. Bashir Hadi Awda Al-Taie on the importance of the development of the stock market in Basrah Governorate, the second axis was presented by Dr. Amjad Sabah Abdul-Ali Al-Asadi on the reality of investment indicators in Iraq, the third axis was presented by Dr. Radi Obaid Nghamish Al-Shammari on the Sugar Company in Iraq after 2003, and the last axis was presented by Dr. Muhammad Najah Al-Jazaery, Director of the Center The axis of the strategic dimensions of the development path in Iraq, where the seminar was moderated by Eng. Aqeel Al-Sharifi, Director of Al-Warith Academy for Development and Strategic Studies, in addition to representatives of the Iraqi government and the private sector. Among the main topics discussed were the ways of the success of the "development path" in Iraq, and its reflections and repercussions on various aspects of life, including the economic and social fields. The seminar will also discuss how to invest this huge project to improve the internal environment in Iraq, and the opportunities for working development. In the end, there was a need for this seminar, an important opportunity to work on the "development path" and its effects on Iraq, and to determine the reason and success of this project, and the maximum benefit from it. The Department of Media and Government Communication