The political economy of Middle East peace : the impact of competing trade agendas
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Bibliographic Information
The political economy of Middle East peace : the impact of competing trade agendas
(Routledge frontiers of political economy, 19)
Routledge, 2015, c1999
- : pbk
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Note
"First issued in paperback 2015"--T.p. verso
Bibliography: p. 240-248
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Political Economy of Middle East Peace looks at the political economy of the Middle Eastern peace process with a focus on the politics of trade. Contributors investigate the ways new commercial alliances develop as a result of economic agencies established via the Arab-Israeli peace process and look at institutions which contribute to redirection of Arab intra- and inter-regional trade, such as the Palestine Monetary Authority, the Middle East Development Bank and free trade zone agencies in Aquaba and Dubai.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements. Introduction J.W Wright, Jr . Regional Agendas. Arab-Isreali relations in a new Middle East order: the politics of economic cooperation Laura Drake . Competing trade agends in the Arab-Isreali peace proces: a case studies approach J.W. Wright, Jr . National Agendas. The impermanent war economy?: peace dividends and capital accumulation in Israel? Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler . The Isreali dliemma over economic discrimination and labor-market competition Noah Lwein-Epstein and Moshe Semoyanov, with J.W. Wright, Jr. Human rights violations as an obstacle to economic development: restrictions on movement in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip Fatemeh Ziai . Embedding social structure in the technological infrastructure: constructing regional social capital for a sustainable peace in the Middle East Shaul M. Gabbay and Amy J. Stein. Border Agendas . Lebanon, Syria, and the Middle East peace process: reconstructing viable economies Imad Harb. Internal and external constraints on Saudi Arabian economic growth: the role of defense expenditures and remittances Robert E. Looney. Epilogue: From cold war to cold peace: tgoughts on the future of the peace process and the political economy of Middle East trade George Wilson. Select bibliography. Index.
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