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TRADE NETWORKS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   171126


Formal side of informality: non-state trading practices and local Uyghur ethnography / Steenberg, Rune   Journal Article
Steenberg, Rune Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article approaches ‘informal’ modes of organization among Uyghur bazaar traders in Xinjiang and Kyrgyzstan in a complex context of increasing state regulatory measures and strong social networks. It captures this organization as a ‘formal side of informality’. The practices comprising it are deemed ‘informal’ from a state-centred perspective, as they are not regulated by the state law or bureaucracy, but they still display a non-state formalization in the sense of being codified, regular and predictable to the traders. The article explores areas and examples of such ‘informal’ formality in the bazaar trade that are built around notions of morality, piousness, pride and shame. It pays special attention to oral contracts, purchase on credit, go-betweens and the status of profit. The article draws on participant observation and interviews in Xinjiang and Kyrgyzstan as well as on descriptions of trade morals and trade customs in ethnographic and folkloristic publications by local Uyghur scholars in Xinjiang.
Key Words State  Kyrgyzstan  Xinjiang  Trade Networks  Informality  Uyghur Literature 
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2
ID:   091110


Indian ocean trade networks, oriental globalization and develop / Kumar, Rajeesh   Journal Article
Kumar, Rajeesh Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract This paper is an endeavor to examine the existence of cosmopolitanism during the time and space of medieval Indian Ocean trade network through the lens of oriental globalization. The concept of oriental globalization not only puts forth significant challenges to the Eurocentric views of development and cultural formation in the modern world, but it also confronts Eurocentrism as a regime of truth that enmeshed in the power of colonial history construction.
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