Islamic Social Welfare and Political Islam in the Arab World Social Capital, Faith-Based Welfare and Islam 'You Reap What You Plant': The Historical Evolution of Social Networks in Jordan Faith-Based Welfare and Jordan's Muslim Brotherhood Movement Economic Liberalisation, Poverty and Faith-Based Welfare Provision in Egypt 1991-2006 Economic Reform, Social Welfare, Civic Society and Islamists in Morocco Structural Reform and the Political Economy of Poverty Reduction in Tunisia: What Role for Civil Society? Conclusion and Synthesis: What Can be Learnt from our Four Country Studies?
JANE HARRIGAN is Professor of Economics and Head of the Economics
Department at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS),
University of London, UK. She has studied at Oxford and Cambridge
Universities and at Harvard and was previously a Senior Lecturer at
Manchester University, UK. She is co-author of the two-volume book
Aid and Power: The World Bank and Policy-Based Lending (with Paul
Mosley and John Toye) and author of From Dictatorship to Democracy:
Economic Policy in Malawi 1964-2000. She has written extensively on
World Bank and IMF programmes in developing countries with a focus
on both sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East and North Africa.
She also works on issues concerning aid, agricultural policy and
food security in sub-Saharan Africa.
HAMED EL-SAID is a Reader in the Political Economy of the
Middle East & North Africa (MENA) at the Manchester
Metropolitan University Business School, UK. He was as a member of
the Royal Scientific Society, then research arm of the office of
His Royal Highness Prince Hassan bin Talal. He published
intensively on MENA and is the co-editor of Management and
International Business Issues in Jordan: The Potential of an Arab
Singapore? (with Kip Becker). He is currently on secondment to
the UN Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI),
where he works as an Associate Expert on Radicalisation and
Extremism.
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