![]() |
Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 matches in All Departments
British mandatory rule created a new infrastructure of urban life in Haifa and attracted a large number of Arabs to the city. But while the development of Zionist economic enterprises was facilitated and the Jewish immigrant population grew, the spheres in which the Arab population could develop were limited. May Seikaly considers the social and economic structure of Haifa before 1918 and examines the process of change which took place. She looks at the attempts made by the Arab community to cope with increasingly unfavourable economic and political conditions, showing how the impotence of the leadership, hardship and dislocating conditions, caused popular grievances and frustration and culminated in the revolt of 1936-39, which had its breeding ground in Haifa.
|
You may like...
Get Your Will Right - A Guide For…
Chris Sloane, Wendy Mangin
Paperback
A World of Three Cultures - Honor…
Miguel E Basanez, Ronald F. Inglehart
Hardcover
R3,586
Discovery Miles 35 860
Measuring Intangible Values - Rethinking…
Marie Harder, Gemma Burford
Hardcover
R4,493
Discovery Miles 44 930
Place, Productivity, and Prosperity…
Somik Lall, William Maloney, …
Paperback
|