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Title: | Arab responses to capitalism in Southeast Asia, 1830 to the present |
Authors: | Rajeswary Brown |
Conference Name: | International Conference on the Yemeni-Hadramis in Southeast Asia: Identity Maintenance or Assimilation? |
Keywords: | Arab capitalism Southeast Asian Economy |
Conference Date: | 2005-08-26 |
Conference Location: | International Islamic University Malaysia, Selangor |
Abstract: | This is a historical analysis of Arab capitalism in South East Asia from the early nineteenth century to the present. It attempts to trace the critical phases of this capitalist evolution, determining its specific role in trade, finance, real estate development, manufacturing and shipping. It poses a fundamental question. How did the Arab groups use diverse regional sites to amass information, disseminate and achieve improved regional economic performance over a long period, 1830- 1960s. But why by the late 1960s were they dislodged from these flourishing trading and financial positions in Singapore, Java, Hyderabad and Aden? Did religious identity and institutions create an inability to respond to the dramatic capitalist transformation sweeping South East Asia after 1960. Were key turning points in capitalist development determined by the technological innovation and markets, or by Islamic economics? Here Arab sub-economies as reproduced in halawa (remittance) shops, Islamic partnerships, contracts, trust and religious morality, and charitable endowments (waqf) are analyzed alongside a contiguous relationship with the economic interactions occurring between Muslim business and Chinese, Japanese, European capitalists and state capitalism and their changing responses and strategies to economic change in the region. |
Pages: | 271-305 |
Call Number: | DS219.H34I558 2005 sem |
Appears in Collections: | Seminar Papers/ Proceedings / Kertas Kerja Seminar/ Prosiding |
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