European Capital and its Impact on Land Distribution in Egypt: A Quantitative Analysis (1900–1914)
Type de ressource
Chapitre de livre
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Saul, Samir (Auteur)
- Blue, Gregory (Éditeur)
- Bunton, Martin (Éditeur)
- Croizier, Ralph C. (Éditeur)
Titre
European Capital and its Impact on Land Distribution in Egypt: A Quantitative Analysis (1900–1914)
Résumé
Of paramount importance in the economic, social, and political history of modern Egypt has been the issue of land distribution. As the primary asset in an economy based on agriculture until the latter part of the twentieth century, land represented the livelihood of the majority of Egyptians, a source of wealth for some and a means of achieving social status for all. Ownership of land was necessary in order to benefit—directly as a cultivator or indirectly as a proprietor earning rents—from Egypt’s natural advantages as a cotton-growing country and the usually high prices it fetched on the international market. Arable land was all the more valuable in that it was rare in a territory largely made up of vast expanses of desert. The problem created by the dearth of tillable land was compounded by the rapid rise of the population.
Titre du livre
Colonialism and the Modern World
Édition
1
Lieu
London
Maison d’édition
Routledge
Date
2002
Pages
120-144
Langue
Anglais
ISBN
978-1-315-49933-8
Titre abrégé
European Capital and its Impact on Land Distribution in Egypt
Extra
Num Pages: 25
Référence
Saul, Samir. « European Capital and its Impact on Land Distribution in Egypt: A Quantitative Analysis (1900–1914) ». Dans Colonialism and the Modern World, sous la direction de Gregory Blue, Martin Bunton, et Ralph C. Croizier, 1re éd., 120‑44. London : Routledge, 2002. https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781315499338-10/.
Années
Corps professoral
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