Charles Issawi
Charles Issawi (1916 – December 8, 2000) was a prominent academic economist and historian of the Middle East at Columbia University and Princeton University in the United States. Roger Owen, the A. J. Meyer Professor of Middle East History at Harvard, stated that Issawi, "was the father of the study of the modern economic history of the Middle East."[1]
Issawi was born in 1916 in Cairo, Egypt, to Assyrian Orthodox Christian parents.[2] Issawi studied at Victoria College in Alexandria, and read philosophy, politics, and economics at Magdalen College, Oxford.[2] He worked for the Egyptian government from 1937-1943.[1] Issawi taught at the American University of Beirut from 1943-47. He joined Columbia University in 1951 and became the Ragnar Nurkse Professor of Economics. He also was the director of the Near and Middle East Institute at Columbia.[2] From 1975 until he retired in 1986, he was the Bayard E. Dodge Professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University. From 1987 to 1991, he was an adjunct professor of economics at New York University. He died on December 8, 2000 at the age of 84.[1][2]
Books
- Egypt: Egypt: An Economic and Social Analysis (1947)
- Egypt at Mid-Century (1954)
- Egypt in Revolution: an economic analysis[2] (Greenwood Press, 1963)
- The economic history of Iran, 1800-1914 (University of Chicago Press, 1971)
- Oil, the Middle East, and the world (Library Press, 1972)
- An economic history of the Middle East and North Africa (Columbia University Press, 1982)
References
External links
- Wolfgang G. Schwanitz: In memoriam Charles Philip Issawi. In: Orient, 43 (2002) 2, 167-171.
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