Relaying cinema in Midcentury Iran: material cultures in transit
In: Cinema cultures in contact, 2
279 results
Sort by:
In: Cinema cultures in contact, 2
World Affairs Online
In: Palgrave connect
In: Economic and Finance collection
The financialization of the economy has brought a number of interrelated problems which have contributed to growing income and wealth inequality. Askari and Mirakhor assert that it is time to make a bold change by putting our financial house in order and on a better path, advocating for a fundamental reform of the financial system.
In: Palgrave studies in Islamic banking, finance, and economics
Introduction : the significance of policy -- Institutional perspective of Islamic economics -- Economic and social justice : a policy objective in Islam -- Risk sharing finance and the role of public policy -- Lessons from financial crisis : a policy failure? -- Financial and capital market policies -- Fiscal and monetary policy in Islam -- Developing social capital -- Financial inclusion : implications for public policy -- Environmental and natural resource policies in Islam -- Benchmarking Islamic finance enabling policies -- Policy challenges : building institutions
In: The political economy of the Middle East
The authors provide a comprehensive background for recent international financial crises--rapid expansion of interest-bearing debt and monetary expansion though the fractional reserve banking system. In this context, the authors provide an analysis of the experience and issues associated with international payments systems--the various forms of the gold standard, the Bretton Woods system and the present system of flexible exchange rates. The authors go on to present a case for fixed exchange rates (gold standard and other interesting variations) anchored in Islamic finance. The message of this book is that the gold standard could provide a solution for addressing international financial instability if and only if it is anchored in 100% reserve banking, which is an essential pillar of Islamic finance. The book should appeal to academics, university courses on Islamic finance, international finance, history of the international payments system and proposals for its reform at the undergraduate and graduate levels, to policymakers, financial analysts, bankers, financial regulators and international financial institutions.
World Affairs Online
"Analyzing the origins of conflicts and wars in the Persian Gulf, this study assesses the conflicts' shared trajectories and fallouts. Although the origins of conflicts are varied (sectarian, religious, ethnic, and tribal, over territory and over resources), as conflicts evolve, the quest for "revenge" and the desire to settle old scores is only one, apparent fuel, which belies a more essential one. The evolution of most conflicts can, over time, be traced to a single source--the struggle for power and control over resources. Hossein Askari argues that reconciliation will require the simultaneous adoption of foundational political, social, and economic reforms by the countries in the region, as well as the cooperation of the global powers, especially the United States, to end support of dictators and reduce the human costs of aggression. The creation of a just society with freedom and equal opportunities for all is a necessary precondition if peace and prosperity are to flourish"--
1 Introduction and Overview 1. - 2 A Glance at Recent Conflicts and Wars 23. - 3 Estimating the Price of Conflicts and Wars 49. - 4 The Seeds of Conflict and War-the Persian Gulf 85. - 5 The Global Costs of Three Wars in the Persian Gulf 119. - 6 How Conflicts and Wars Can Be Ended 147
World Affairs Online
In: Development Centre studies
In: Praeger special studies in international economics and development
In: Conflict and society: advances in research, Volume 9, Issue 1, p. 99-114
ISSN: 2164-4551
Abstract
This article discusses how the ongoing conflict in Syria and the Rojava Revolution gave way to newly imagined futures and political possibilities for displaced Kurdish Syrians. It examines the Syrian war and the broader Middle Eastern context as a system of unpredictable escalations (Højer et al. 2018) and the liberation of Kobanî as a "critical" and "generative" moment (Das 1995; Kapferer 2015) in the Kurdish imaginary. Using ethnographic (audiovisual) material, I point to how people in forced displacement must constantly navigate uncertainty and reconfigure and consolidate their unknown future paths. I argue that my interlocutor Mihemed stabilized these uncertainties through his capacity to hold multiple future possibilities open simultaneously in order to keep every outcome viable.