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Linda Matar examines Syria's failure to promote
employment-generating investment prior to the uprising. Tackling
the thorny issue of the inapplicability of modern investment theory
to a developing country, she situates the analysis of investment in
Syria in its historical context and examines the socioeconomic
structure and political preconditions that set the course of
capital accumulation. Matar argues that the class in charge of
development, which oversaw the allocation of resources during the
Hafiz and Bashar Assad regimes, precipitated a crisis of capital
accumulation. Difficult-to-access data and information compiled
from fieldwork reveal how neoliberal reforms failed to build
productive capacity and instead enriched a few through short-term
speculative and mercantile ventures. Productive investment in Syria
prior to the uprising lurched downward, and the key related
socio-economic variables followed. These deteriorating conditions
contributed to the social explosion in 2011. Exploring the poor
quality and quantity of investment, this study probes how the cant
of the free market served as a veneer behind which the
institutional decisions distorted income distribution in a way that
would inevitably lead to collapse.
This edited collection aims to analytically reconceptualise the
Syrian crisis by examining how and why the country has moved from a
stable to a war-torn society. It is written by scholars from a
variety of disciplinary backgrounds, all of whom make no attempt to
speculate on the future trajectory of the conflict, but aim instead
to examine the historical background that has laid the objective
conditions for Syria's descent to its current situation. Their work
represents an attempt to dissect the multi-layered foundation of
the Syrian conflict and to make understanding its complex inner
workings accessible to a broader readership. The book is divided
into four parts, each of which elaborates on the origins and
dynamics of today's crisis from the perspective of a different
discipline. When put together, the four parts provide a holistic
picture of Syria's developmental trajectory from the early
twentieth century through to the present day. Themes addressed
include Syria's postcolonial development efforts, its leap into
socialism and then into neoliberalism in the late twentieth
century, its politics within the resistance front, and finally its
food and health security concerns.
Linda Matar examines Syria's failure to promote
employment-generating investment prior to the uprising. Tackling
the thorny issue of the inapplicability of modern investment theory
to a developing country, she situates the analysis of investment in
Syria in its historical context and examines the socioeconomic
structure and political preconditions that set the course of
capital accumulation. Matar argues that the class in charge of
development, which oversaw the allocation of resources during the
Hafiz and Bashar Assad regimes, precipitated a crisis of capital
accumulation. Difficult-to-access data and information compiled
from fieldwork reveal how neoliberal reforms failed to build
productive capacity and instead enriched a few through short-term
speculative and mercantile ventures. Productive investment in Syria
prior to the uprising lurched downward, and the key related
socio-economic variables followed. These deteriorating conditions
contributed to the social explosion in 2011. Exploring the poor
quality and quantity of investment, this study probes how the cant
of the free market served as a veneer behind which the
institutional decisions distorted income distribution in a way that
would inevitably lead to collapse.
This edited collection aims to analytically reconceptualise the
Syrian crisis by examining how and why the country has moved from a
stable to a war-torn society. It is written by scholars from a
variety of disciplinary backgrounds, all of whom make no attempt to
speculate on the future trajectory of the conflict, but aim instead
to examine the historical background that has laid the objective
conditions for Syria's descent to its current situation. Their work
represents an attempt to dissect the multi-layered foundation of
the Syrian conflict and to make understanding its complex inner
workings accessible to a broader readership. The book is divided
into four parts, each of which elaborates on the origins and
dynamics of today's crisis from the perspective of a different
discipline. When put together, the four parts provide a holistic
picture of Syria's developmental trajectory from the early
twentieth century through to the present day. Themes addressed
include Syria's postcolonial development efforts, its leap into
socialism and then into neoliberalism in the late twentieth
century, its politics within the resistance front, and finally its
food and health security concerns.
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