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State and Economics in the Middle East : a society in transition

Unknown Author   •   1973   •   GWP
State and Economics  in the Middle East : a society in transition

  • Pages: xiv,452p.
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Bibliographic Details
Title: State and Economics in the Middle East : a society in transition
Author(s): Alfred Bonne
Publisher: GWP
Publication Year: 1973
Place: London
Series: International Library of Sociology and Social Recontrustruction
Call Number: 309.15604 BOS
Accession: 579
Content

Table of Contents

Preface to the First Edition . . . . . . . . . ix

Preface to the Second Edition . . . . . . . . x

Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . xi

PART ONE: THE MIDDLE EASTERN STATE IN TRANSITION

Section I: The Middle Eastern State until 1914

I. THE CONCEPTION OF THE STATE IN WEST AND EAST . . . 3

Function, principles and distinguishing features—Capitulations, "millets" and their importance—the plural constitution.

II. INTERNAL POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE . . . 10

The Empire in the stage of reform: achievements and failures—period of the Tanzimat—decrees of 1839, 1856 and proclamation of the Constitution in 1876—attitude of Abdul Hamid II—rise of the Young Turks.

III. CHANGES IN STATE INSTITUTIONS . . . 18

Despotism and Constitution—Khalifate and Sultanate—Islamic thought and the evolution of the law—civic rights of the people under the new Ottoman constitution.

IV. THE ROLE OF BUREAUCRACY (APPARATUS OF GOVERNMENT) . . . 30

Share of bureaucracy in the Oriental and the modern State—corruption and venality as accepted practices—attitude of the authorities towards this problem (Courts, local administration, foreign consulates)—extension of administration and increasing specialisation of the Civil Service.

V. CHANGES IN LOCAL GOVERNMENT . . . 39

Local government before the reforms—the feudal lords and local government—organs of local and provincial governments—the reforms of Mahmud II and his successors—social and political structure of population.

VI. PUBLIC FINANCE IN THE MIDDLE EAST . . . 51

Historical summary—land taxes as main source of public revenue—relation between the structure of the Oriental State and public finance—Nineteenth century reforms.

Section II: The Middle Eastern State between two World Wars

VII. CONSEQUENCES OF THE LIQUIDATION OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE . . . 62

Changes in the political map and in the composition of the population—principles that shaped the Middle East after the First World War.

VIII. THE NEW TURKEY . . . 68

Exchange of populations—birth of a new constitution—new education policy—programmes and reality.

IX. THE ARAB SUCCESSION STATES . . . 77

Historical survey—steps preliminary to the establishment of the Arab States—Creation of the Mandate.

X. THE MANDATE AND ITS LESSON . . . 88

A new type of State—criteria of maturity.

XI. (a) POLITICAL RÉGIME AND SOCIAL STRATIFICATION IN THE ARAB SUCCESSION STATES . . . 95

(b) THE WESTERNISING OF ADMINISTRATION . . . 97

Social Structures and Political Parties.

PART TWO: THE AGRARIAN SOCIETY OF THE MIDDLE EAST

Section I: Stationary Agriculture

XII. THE HERITAGE CONDITIONS OF LAND TENURE . . . 105

General features—historical summary (Babylon, Egypt, Palestine, Byzantine Empire)—Early Islamic period.

XIII. AGRARIAN INSTITUTIONS OF MIDDLE EAST COUNTRIES . . . 115

Categories of land in Islamic law—Mushaa (common landownership), Waqf (mortmain lands)—Oriental feudalism—types of farm management and distribution of income from the land in Oriental agriculture—summary.

XIV. NATURAL FACTORS IN STATIONARY AGRICULTURE . . . 139

Climate (temperature, rainfall, water courses and wells, "rain factor", periodicity, air-currents and humidity)—steppe character of Oriental areas—soil properties—importance of natural conditions.

XV. OTHER FACTORS IN STATIONARY AGRICULTURE . . . 153

Conditions for mass transport—the Oriental worker and his specific qualities—implements and means of cultivation—scarcity of capital—growth of population.

XVI. PRINCIPAL SYSTEMS OF FARMING IN ORIENTAL STATIONARY AGRICULTURE . . . 164

Problem of the "Asiatic Agrarian Society"—Main systems: dry farming and irrigated agriculture—Prerequisites of irrigated farming—irrigation and the agrarian economy as a whole—irrigation as a factor in the economy of the individual farm—implements of irrigation.

Section II: Agriculture in Transition

XVII. CHANGES IN CONDITIONS OF LAND TENURE . . . 186

Changes in land ownership—Re-emergence of the large landowner in the nineteenth century (Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Iraq, Egypt)—Waqf and Mushaa—land reforms.

XVIII. CHANGES IN AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS AND METHODS . . . 199

Introduction of basin irrigation in place of flood irrigation—diversification of crops and increase of areas by irrigation—increase of productivity—importance of communication—summary of trends.

PART THREE: THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN THE MIDDLE EAST

Section I: The Pre-Industrial Period

XIX. GENERAL FEATURES . . . 213

The meaning of the Industrial Revolution—the problem of capitalism in Oriental countries—distribution of the population over town and country—living conditions in Oriental towns at the beginning of the nineteenth century.

XX. THE DEVELOPMENT OF NON-AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION FROM THE END OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY TO THE DEATH OF MOHAMMED ALI (1849) . . . 227

Local conditions and character of production—relations between employers and employees—the guilds (futuwwa).

XXI. THE ATTEMPT OF MOHAMMED ALI: THE FIRST INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN THE MIDDLE EAST . . . 238

The history of Mohammed Ali's experiments—his failure and its lessons.

XXII. THE INFLUX OF EUROPEAN CAPITAL AND ENTREPRENEURS (1850-1914) . . . 247

The background for the attraction of European capital—its principal fields of activity—prerequisites of industrialisation.

XXIII. DEVELOPMENT OF INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION DURING THE PERIOD 1850-1914 . . . 258

Slow but important changes—progress in figures—conclusions as to this period—sociological aspects.

Section II: The Industrialisation of the Middle East between the two World Wars

XXIV. THE NEW POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CONDITIONS . . . 269

The background: political, economic and sociological factors—population trend as a factor in industrialisation.

XXV. THE NEW POLICY OF INDUSTRIALISATION UP TO 1945 . . . 274

The industrial policy in Turkey—State and industrialisation in other Oriental countries (Egypt, Iraq, Palestine, Syria and Lebanon).

XXVI. THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF INDUSTRIALISATION IN FIGURES . . . 292

(i) Developments until 1945

(ii) Developments since 1945

Structure of foreign trade—occupational distribution of the population, etc.—progress of industrial development in figures.

XXVII. PRESENT-DAY PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRIALISATION IN THE MIDDLE EAST . . . 312

Industrialisation and national income—the Machine and Oriental Society—social and political effects of industrialisation.

XXVIII. CHANGES IN THE SYSTEM OF COMMUNICATIONS . . . 320

The contraction of the Oriental space—traditional means of communication—opening-up of the Orient after the First World War.

PART FOUR: PROBLEMS AND ASPECTS OF A CHANGING SOCIETY

XXIX. THE ISLAMIC SOCIETY—HISTORICAL ASPECTS . . . 333

The idea of equality—the "foreigners" and Islam—the slaves.

XXX. STRUCTURE OF THE TRADITIONAL ORIENTAL CITY . . . 343

XXXI. MOSLEM SOCIETY IN TRANSITION . . . 348

XXXII. ECONOMIC ETHICS OF MOSLEM SOCIETY . . . 352

XXXIII. THE STANDARD OF LIVING . . . 365

XXXIV. THE NOMADS . . . 369

XXXV. SUMMARY . . . 380

Postscript: THE MIDDLE EAST AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR . . . 394

Notes and Observations . . . 416

Index . . . 441

MAPS AND CHARTS

Net Productivity per Male Earner in Agriculture 1934-5 . . . 210

Turkish Railways before World War I . . . 319

Turkish Railways after World War II . . . 328

Oilfields and Oil Production in Middle East . . . 329

 

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