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LEBANAN (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   023168


Lebanese christians attitudes toward Israel and the Peace proce / Haddad, Simon Nov-Dec 2002  Article
Haddad, Simon Article
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Publication 2002.
Description 403-420
Key Words Israel  Middle East  Lebanan  Peace Process 
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2
ID:   019421


Lebanese factions begin to challenge Syrian domination / Bruce James June 2001  Article
Bruce James Article
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Publication June 2001.
Description 39-42
Key Words Syria  Economy-Middle East  Middle East-Economy  Lebanan 
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3
ID:   069018


Strategic of Asymmetric warfare and their implementation in the / Kuperman, Ranan D   Journal Article
Kuperman, Ranan D Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Key Words Conflict  Armed Conflict  Asymmetric Warfare  Lebanan 
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4
ID:   096869


Transnational pathways and politico-economic power: globalisation and the Lebanese civil war / Hourani, Najib   Journal Article
Hourani, Najib Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Celebrants of neo-liberal globalisation and their critics ascribe to the rationality of finance capital enormous power. It opens new territories, produces new cultural forms and creates a hierarchy of cities and the spaces within them. How might this image change when viewed from spaces allegedly excluded from capitalist globalisation? For many, Lebanon during its 1975-1990 civil war was such a place. The international financial institutions and their Lebanese allies presented neo-liberal reform as the necessary prerequisite for post-conflict re-integration with rational processes of capitalist globalisation. Through a multi-sited political economy of one financial network operant in wartime Lebanon, I show that the "militia economy" was never outside larger processes of financial globalisation. I argue that it was integrated into a global realm consisting not of financial corporations operating according to a universal capitalist rationality, but rather one of similarly constituted networks of capitalists, companies and other institutions working within and alongside a variety of states in pursuit of politico-economic power.
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