scholarly journals عروض مختصرة

Author(s):  
أسماء حسين ملكاوي

موسوعة الاقتصاد الإسلامي في المصارف والنقود والأسواق المالية، تحرير رفعت السيد العوضي، القاهرة: المعهد العالمي للفكر الإسلامي ودار السلام للطباعة والنشر والتوزيع والترجمة، 2010م، 12مجلداً، 6560 صفحة. نظرية الحسم الزمني في الاقتصاد الإسلامي، مجدي علي غيث، الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية: المعهد العالمي للفكر الإسلامي، 2010م، 288 صفحة. نظرية المخاطرة في الاقتصاد الإسلامي دراسة تأصيلية تطبيقية، عدنان عبد الله عويضة، الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية: المعهد العالمي للفكر الإسلامي، 2010م، 351 صفحة. مدخل في مدارس الفكر الاقتصادي؛ نظرة تحليلية للتطورات الاقتصادية المعاصرة من منظور الاقتصاد الإسلامي والاقتصاد الرأسمالي، عمرو هشام محمد، دمشق: دار طلاس للدراسات والنشر، ط1، 2009م، 152 صفحة. الحقوق الاقتصادية والاجتماعية والسياسية في الشريعة الإسلامية، محمد علي السالم الحلبي، عمان: مؤسسة الوراق للنشر والتوزيع، 2009م، 434 صفحة. الأزمة المالية العالمية (رؤية إسلامية)، أشرف محمد دوابة، القاهرة: دار السلام، 2009م، 160 صفحة. قضايا اقتصادية عربية، سميح مسعود، عمان: دار الشروق للنشر، 2009م، 560 صفحة. المعاملات المالية المعاصرة وأثر نظرية الذرائع في تطبيقاتها، أختر زيتي بنت عبد العزيز، دمشق: دار الفكر المعاصر، 2008م، 383 صفحة. التداول الإلكتروني للعملات- أحكامها الشرعية، بشر محمد لطفي، عمان: دار النفائس، 2009م، 232 صفحة. الآثار الاقتصادية لأسواق الأوراق المالية من منظور الاقتصاد الإسلامي، زكريا سلامة عيسى شطناوي، عمان: دار النفائس، 2009م، 272 صفحة. First Principles of Islamic Economics, Sayyid Abul A'la Mawdudi (Author), Shafaq Hashmi (Translator), UK: Islamic Foundation (15 Oct 2009). Islamic Money and Banking: Integrating Money in Capital Theory, Iraj Toutounchian, NJ: Wiley (July 7, 2009), 350 pages. Role of the State in the Economy: An Islamic Perspective (Islamic Economics), Muhammad Nejatullah Siddiqi, UK: The Islamic Foundation (March 1, 2010), 175 pages. Islamic Capitalism: Presentation of an Alternative Economic System, Maher D. Kababji, Wordclay (January 21, 2009), 72 pages. False Economy: A Surprising Economic History of the World, Alan Beattie, Riverhead Hardcover (April 16, 2009), 336 pages. The Role of Law and Ethics in the Globalized Economy (MPI Studies on Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law), Joseph Straus, Springer; 1 edition (May 11, 2009), 177 pages. Economic Liberalization, Social Capital and Islamic Welfare Provision, Jane R. Harrigan, Hamid El-Said, Palgrave Macmillan (June 23, 2009), 272 pages. New Issues in Islamic Finance and Economics: Progress and Challenges, Hossein Askari, Zamir Iqbal, Abbas Mirakhor, Wiley (June 27, 2008), 373 pages. Islamic Finance: Law, Economics, and Practice, Mahmoud A. El-Gamal, Cambridge University Press; 1 edition (November 24, 2008), 240 pages. Understanding Islamic Finance, Muhammad Ayub, Wiley (January 2, 2008), 542 pages. A Comparative Study of Banking in the West and in Islam, Cheikh A. Soumare, Vantage Press (October 6, 2008), 77 pages. للحصول على كامل المقالة مجانا يرجى النّقر على ملف ال PDF  في اعلى يمين الصفحة.

2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 590-611
Author(s):  
David Plouviez

The history of maritime trade has been the subject of considerable research since the 1950s, but the technical artefacts of this trade have not received the attention they deserve. While historians have paid plenty attention to ships – their features, tonnage, etc. – and port infrastructure overseas, the issues relating to naval repair and construction in the Empires have rarely attracted interest. However, this is a key factor in understanding the dynamics of trade, which encompasses the interplay between economic history, social history and the history of technology. Drawing on the example of the French Empire, this article aims to provide a first approach to this economy of maintenance, repair and shipbuilding overseas. The first step is to identify the places where these complex tasks were carried out and to establish the temporality of equipment in overseas ports. Did the French Empire offer a network of ports equipped to maintain, repair and build ships? What equipment does this include? But while the question of infrastructure is crucial, insofar as it raises other issues related to the role of the State and its relationship with economic stakeholders, it is also essential to consider that a significant share of maintenance, repair and construction tasks were not associated with any specific infrastructure. The question of knowledge, know-how and their exchange within the Empires is also important and is the subject of the second part of this article. The aim is to demonstrate that the identification and breakdown of shipbuilding workers, the establishment of their occupational mobility and the technical discussions they engaged in with other Europeans, settlers or natives, provide challenging research opportunities that may help us to understand the maintenance, repair and construction of ships in the Empires.


Author(s):  
Sara Lorenzini

This introductory chapter provides an overview of how development became a Cold War global project from the late 1940s until the late 1980s. Narrating the political, intellectual, and economic history of the twentieth century through the lens of development means dealing with ideas as much as with material transformation, recounting the ways ideas and projects affected local realities, transnational interactions, and, eventually, notions of development. In describing this trajectory, the book makes three main points. First, it argues that the Cold War was fundamental in shaping the global aspirations and ideologies of development and modeling the institutional structures that still rule foreign aid today. Second, it contends that the role of the state was crucial, and that though development projects were articulated in global terms, as narratives to frame problems and provide solutions, they actually served national purposes. Third, it argues that development institutions tried to create a universal and homogeneous concept of development but ultimately failed.


Author(s):  
Angeliki Laiju

"The Economic History of Byzantium", now in press, has been discussed on the basis of new archaeological data, a broader historiographical environment and on the economic ideology. The methodological problems concern chronology, the role of the state, the relationship between ideology and reality, the significance of smallholdings, the usefulness of modern economic theory. The economy was a mixed one, providing some of the important needs of the people.


2008 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 697-713 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. C. LUBENOW

The question in 1898 of the recognition by Cambridge University of St Edmund's House, a Roman Catholic foundation, might initially seem to involve questions irrelevant in the modern university. It can, however, be seen to raise issues concerning modernity, the place of religion in the university and the role of the university itself. This article therefore sets this incident in university history in wider terms and examines the ways in which the recognition of St Edmund's House was a chapter in the history of liberalism, in the history of Roman Catholicism, in the history of education and in the history of secularism.


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