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The Long Divergence: How Islamic Law Held Back the Middle East Hardcover – 5 Dec 2010

4.2 out of 5 stars 6 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 424 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press; 1st edition (5 Dec. 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691147566
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691147567
  • Product Dimensions: 23.8 x 16.5 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,023,551 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Review

"Professor Kuran's book offers the best explanation yet for why the Middle East has lagged. After poring over ancient business records, Professor Kuran persuasively argues that what held the Middle East back wasn't Islam as such, or colonialism, but rather various secondary Islamic legal practices that are no longer relevant today."--Nicholas D. Kristof, New York Times



"This is a book to be not just tasted but chewed and digested. Instead of facile claims that Islam is the solution or Islam is the problem, readers get a detailed history of economic institutions in the Middle East as compared to those in the West. Kuran shows that the Islamic law and practices underlying Middle Eastern commerce worked well for a long time and were much more flexible than usually assumed. . . . Clearly presented quantitative data and illuminating anecdotes add up to a fine feast."--L. Carl Brown, Foreign Affairs



"Mr. Kuran's arguments have broad implications for the debate about how to foster economic development. He demonstrates that the West's long ascendancy was rooted in its ability to develop institutions that combined labour and capital in imaginative new ways."--Economist



"The Long Divergence offers a pathbreaking analysis of why the flourishing premodern economies of the Islamic world fell into relative decline as Western Europe rose. And it explores the issue of whether conservative Islam is compatible with modern economic institutions. You'll be surprised by many of his conclusions."--Peter Passell, Milken Institute Review



"[The Long Divergence] explains a large part of why the Middle East and Turkey fell behind the West and law and economics has a lot to do with it. Various laws in Islamic societies were not conducive to large-scale economic structures, at precisely the time when such structures were becoming profitable and indeed essential as drivers of economic growth. This is not a book of handwaving but rather he nails the detail, whether it is on inheritance law, contracts, forming corporations, or any number of other topics."--Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution



"In an interesting new book called The Long Divergence, Timur Kuran of Duke argues that Islam's economic restrictions, rather than its cultural conservatism or isolationism, stunted development in countries where it was the dominant religion."--Massimo Calabresi, Time.com's Swampland blog



"Kuran's thesis is contentious; but it does provide us with an incentive to reformulate Islamic law. It is an excellent starting-point for a debate long overdue."--Ziauddin Sardar, Independent



"[G]round-breaking. . . . In this wide-ranging study, Kuran explores other possible factors which favored the non-Muslim business ethos over the Islamic one, but as a true scholar he rehearses other possible explanations."--Arnold Ages, Chicago Jewish Star



"A ground-breaking book. . . . Kuran argues Islamic law primarily failed to develop the concept of a corporation: an economic and legal construct, separated from family and tribal loyalty, designed to encourage investment and profit sharing."--Chris Berg, Sydney Morning Herald



"Timur Kuran is an avid reader of Islamic economic and legal history and an immensely well informed scholar. This latest work not only combines his earlier arguments but also provides some new perspectives."--Murat Cizakca, EH.Net



"[A]n invaluable contribution to the debate."--Choice



"[T]his is a most informative book and may make contemporary Muslims wonder whether a forthcoming second codification of Islamic law should heed some of the warnings of the author."--Murat Çizakça, MESA Bulletin



"Kuran deserves to be lauded for providing a narrative for how certain Middle Eastern institutions negatively affected economic outcomes. This book represents an advance in our understanding of the functioning of commercial institutions in the Middle East and of their dynamic consequences. . . . Kuran has provided an important scholarly resource for both academics and those interested in the economic and political development of the region more broadly."--Eric Chaney, Development and Change



"By eschewing simple explanations and challenging scholars to look at such heated topics as the Capitulations in a new light, Long Divergence offers a new window on an old dogma. In a time when there is a trend to blame much of the Middle East's problems on Western meddling, it is important that scholarship swims slightly against the current in shedding new light on questions of modernity and the reasons behind economic stagnation in the Muslim world."--Seth Frantzman, Digest of Middle East Studies



"The Long Divergence is an excellent book that should be of great appeal to scholars interested in the Middle East and its history, economic historians interested in the general question of why some regions failed to modernize, and social scientists interested in the historical and institutional roots of comparative underdevelopment."--Metin Cosgel, Journal of Economic History



"In this beautifully crafted book, Timur Kuran provides a remarkably rich analysis of how Islamic law impeded economic progress in the Middle East and North Africa. Kuran's views are fresh and powerful, and they are subtle."--Jack A. Goldstone, Perspectives on Politics



"The Long Divergence is a bold and stimulating book, based on a prodigious amount of research in world economic history. It is the first work of its kind to wrestle with the big question about the Middle East's economic path. . . . Though it may stir up controversy among those who may not take well to his critique of Islam, this landmark study will find a broad readership to debate its provocative conclusions."--Ghislaine Lydon, Global History



"[This book] is a major achievement that should be read by everyone with an interest in the region, as well as by scholars in economic history and institutional economics."--Mark Koyama, Public Choice

From the Back Cover


"Sophisticated, purposive, and insightful, this book brings the powerful thinking of an economist to bear on a central question of Middle Eastern history. The argument is lucid and compelling; anyone with a serious interest in the way the world has changed in recent centuries will find this book rewarding."--Michael Cook, author of A Brief History of the Human Race


"The Long Divergence is a turning point in the understanding of Middle Eastern economic history and a must-read for everyone interested in economic development in the Islamic world more generally."--Avner Greif, Stanford University


"Kuran's book is a wonderful resource for anyone interested in the Middle East and the Islamic world. The path toward economic and legal reforms for the Islamic world can only be charted by understanding the historical impediments to economic development in the region. There is currently no better starting point to contemplate such reforms and development efforts than this book."--Mahmoud El-Gamal, author of Islamic Finance: Law, Economics, and Practice


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Customer Reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
The author aims to explain why the Middle East is backwards, but - refreshingly - without the usual finger-pointing at everyone else (e.g. the Crusades). Instead, he offers a dispassionate account of which aspects of the Islamic law and customs, as well as non-Islamic regional practices, led to the region not developing sophisticated financial services that did emerge in Western Europe, and how that inhibited both economic and social growth. He never ceases in asking the question "why?", and the analysis becomes really deep as a result. Competing explanations are often cited and argued against. There are tables and charts with data from court registers, quotes from legal proceedings, and interesting real life examples of early Middle Eastern enterprise. Four stars, because it could have been written more clearly.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
This is a book well worth reading simply because it tries to explain that a large part of the difference between the material properity of the West and the Middle East is how society is structured. The big idea I took away from this was that the western companies are structured to be able to finance themselves using other peoples money and they are seperate from the personalities / families than run them
In fact Western economies have numerous example of companies that were family ones that eventually went public to get away from the limitations of family business - but in a large part that is how Islamic companiea are run and in a globalised economy this is their big disadvantage - always assuming the objective of the business is to compete in a world economy
I found it easy to read and well structured and a theory that hold up based on the presented evidence
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I bought this book after reading a review about it in a magazine. The subject is interesting, both because I was interested why islamic countries are so much behind Europe, while they once were more advanced. I am also interested what factors more generally have promoted progress and which not. The point of view, that the main factor affecting progress is in the system, or culture level is interesting. I have also encountered this point of view in innovation literature, that a main driver behind a company's success should be the company culture.

The bad thing in the book is that it is little bit hard to read, very academic style and some difficult vocabulary for someone for whom english is a foreign language.
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