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Publication year: 2006
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| Series: | Themes in Islamic Studies, 3 |
| ISBN-13 (i)The ISBN (International Standard Book Number) has been changed from 10 to 13 digits on 1 January 2007: | 978 90 04 15134 5 |
| ISBN-10: | 90 04 15134 6 |
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| Cover: | Hardback |
| Number of pages: | xvi, 454 pp. |
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| List price: | € 125.00 / US$ 185.00 |
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Table of contents
Preface Acknowledgement Transliteration of Arabic Letters
Pre-Islamic Arabia: Poetry, Tribal Rivalry and Heroism (800 B.C.–10 A.C.) The Birth of the Islamic State: Economic Thought in the Qur'àn and Sunnah (610 A.C.–632 A.C.) Thought of the Rightly Guided Caliphs (632 A.C.–661 A.C.) The Dynastic Caliphates: The Umayyads and the Reforms (661 A.C.–750 A.C.) The Abbasìd’s Golden Age: The Florescence of Islamic Economics (750 A.C.–1000 A.C.) Political Fragmentation and Cultural Diversity (1000 A.C.–1400 A.C.) The Three Empires and the Islamic Phoenix (1400 A.C.–1800 A.C.) The Crisis of Modernisation and Islamicisation: From Reform to Revival (1800 A.C.–20th Century) Islamic Economic Renaissance: Islamic Economics in the Twentieth Century
Glossary Bibliography Index
Readership
Those interested in Islamic economics and finance, as well as Muslims curious about the implications of their faith for economic behaviour. Researchers in the wider field of Islamic studies and in the history of economic thought may also find the work of interest.
About the author(s)
Rodney Wilson is Director of Postgraduate Studies at Durham University’s Institute of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies.Ahmed El-Ashker is Professor of Finance in the Faculty of Management Sciences at the Prince of Songkla University in Thailand. Both authors have written numerous books and articles on Islamic economics, banking and finance.
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The study covers Muslim economic thought from the emergence of Islam, long before economics became a separate discipline with distinctive analytical tools. The economic environment in ancient Arabia from which Islam emerged is examined, and the economic concepts in the Qur'ān and Sunnah are discussed, as well as the thinking of early Muslim jurists. Detailed consideration is given to Islamic economic thought during the dynasties of the Umayyads and the Abbasids, periods of administrative and economic reform, as well as of much latter developments under the Ottomans, Safawids and Moghuls. Islamic revivalist reform movements are appraised, as these predated the reawakening of interest in Islamic economics in the last century, and subsequent profusion of writing, with the works of the leading contributors reviewed in this volume.
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