What Killed Middle East Liberalism?

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Duke Professor of Economics Timur Kuran and Dartmouth Professor of Government Dirk Vandewalle debate the role of oil and Islam in the failure of liberalism in the Middle East.
    Wednesday, January 11, 2017
    4:30pm-5:45pm
    Filene Auditorium, Moore Building
    "What Killed Middle East Liberalism?"
    Timur Kuran (Duke University)
    Dirk Vandewalle (Dartmouth College)
    Sponsored by the PEP Leadership Council (www.dartmouth.edu/pep)
    Timur Kuran is Professor of Economics and Political Science, and Gorter Family
    Professor of Islamic Studies at Duke University. His research focuses on (1)
    social change, including the evolution of preferences and institutions, and (2)
    the economic and political history and modernization of the Middle East. His
    current projects include a study of the role that the Middle East's traditional
    institutions played in its poor political performance, as measured by
    democratization and human liberties. Among his publications are Private Truths,
    Public Lies: The Social Consequences of Preference Falsification (Harvard
    University Press); Islam and Mammon: The Economic Predicaments of Islamism
    (Princeton University Press); The Long Divergence: How Islamic Law Held Back
    the Middle East (Princeton University Press); and a tri-lingual edited work
    that consists of ten volumes, Socio-Economic Life in Seventeenth-century
    Istanbul: Glimpses from Court Records (Is Bank Publications). After graduating
    from Robert Academy in Istanbul in 1973, Kuran went on to study economics at
    Princeton University (AB 1977) and Stanford University (PhD 1982). Between 1982
    and 2007 he taught at the University of Southern California. He was also a
    member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, the John Olin Visiting
    Professor at the Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago, and a
    visiting professor of economics at Stanford University. He currently directs
    the Association for Analytic Learning about Islam and Muslim Societies
    (AALIMS); is a member of the Executive Committee of the International Economic
    Association; edits a book series for Cambridge University Press, serves on
    numerous editorial boards; and is a member of the Turkish Academy of Sciences.
    He has served on the World Economic Forum's Arab World Council.
    Diederick "Dirk" Vandewalle is Associate Professor of Government at Dartmouth
    College. His research focuses on Libya, political economy, Middle East
    politics, commodity booms, institutional development, and economic reform in
    developing countries, and state-building and regime change in the Middle East
    and North Africa. He is the author of A History of Modern Libya (Cambridge
    University Press) and of Libya Since Independence: Oil and State-Building
    (Cornell University Press) and has written widely on the Arab Spring. He
    received his B.A. from Southwest Minnesota State University and his PhD from
    Columbia University.

Комментарии • 3

  • @plan101
    @plan101 7 лет назад +1

    always said that like the indo European language tree ,Anglo America or American English had a branch of Arabic after the colonisation of the GCC region in 2004 .Inasmuch would be an American studies dialogue and one purely based on a corporate agenda.