ID | 103456 |
Title Proper | Resistance to economic penetration |
Other Title Information | the karguzar and foreign firms in Qajar Iran |
Language | ENG |
Author | Gilbar, Gad G |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | European merchants and investors doing business in the Middle East during the long 19th century expected that commercial disputes in mixed cases would be conducted according to procedures and laws familiar to and accepted by them. In the Ottoman Empire and Egypt, mixed courts based on the French commercial code were established during that century. The Qajars, however, offered the foreign commercial community a different judicial institution: the local ka-rguza-r (agent) and his majlis (court). By the beginning of the 20th century, thirty-six ka-rguza-r offices operated in Iranian towns and harbors. Nevertheless, foreign (mainly British) merchants and their consuls complained bitterly that it was not an effective institution and that it clearly favored the local tujja-r (big merchants). They claimed that these defects meant huge financial losses to them. The Qajars viewed this institution and its functioning differently. It served their policy of discouraging foreign penetration, and it contributed to the competitiveness of the Iranian tujja-r in their struggle for commercial superiority. |
`In' analytical Note | International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 43, No. 1; Feb 2011: p5-23 |
Journal Source | International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 43, No. 1; Feb 2011: p5-23 |
Key Words | Middle East ; Iran ; Economic Conditions ; Qajar Iran ; Egypt |