Marsh Dwellers of the Euphrates Delta

Marsh Dwellers of the Euphrates Delta

Author: S. M. Salim

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2021-01-07

Total Pages: 166

ISBN-13: 1000323382

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Dr Salim, of Bagdad University, spent two years amongst the remarkable tribal peoples who inhabit the great marshes of the lower Euphrates. He describes their social and economic organization and discusses on the one hand the process by which people with bedouin traditions and values have adapted themselves to different and difficult conditions, and on the other the effects upon them of submission to the central government and the modernisation of their modes of life that has resulted from it. His account offers a fascinating study of people living in an unusual environment, and will be of value to the anthropologist and ethnologist for its precise ethnography. At the same time, as one of the few detailed studies of the changes now being wrought on such a large scale by modern economic and political forces, it has real importance for the general student of contemporary Middle Eastern affairs.


Marsh Dwellers of the Euphrates Delta

Marsh Dwellers of the Euphrates Delta

Author: Shākir Muṣţafā Salīm

Publisher: London, Athlone P

Published: 1962

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13:

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This book is a detailed study of a marsh-dwelling community of bedouin descent on the Lower Euphrates. It should be of interest to both social anthropologists and students of social conditions and change in the Middle East. It provides one of the very few systematic and carefully documented field studies of the values and social rules whereby the intense solidarity of the patrilineal and largely endogamous kin groups of bedouin society are sustained. But this study also shows that as between clans and lineages in Marsh Arab society as a whole, there have been great changes over the past generation.--Foreword.


The Iraqi Marshlands and the Marsh Arabs

The Iraqi Marshlands and the Marsh Arabs

Author: Sam Kubba

Publisher: Trans Pacific Press

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 312

ISBN-13: 9780863723339

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This text is for those wishing to develop an understanding of a cultural legacy and lifestyle that survives today only as a fragmented cultural inheritance. The book illustrates how the economy and lives of the Ma'dan (Marsh Arabs) that spans over 5000 years remained similar to the ancient practices of their Sumerian forebears.


Iraq's Marsh Arabs in the Garden of Eden

Iraq's Marsh Arabs in the Garden of Eden

Author: Edward L. Ochsenschlager

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press

Published: 2014-04-03

Total Pages: 312

ISBN-13: 193453675X

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What can the present tell us about the past? From 1968 to 1990, Edward Ochsenschlager conducted ethnoarchaeological fieldwork near a mound called al-Hiba, in the marshes of southern Iraq. In examining the material culture of three tribes—their use of mud, reed, wood, and bitumen, and their husbandry of cattle, water buffalo, and sheep—he chronicles what is now a lost way of life. He helps us understand ancient manufacturing processes, an artifact's significance and the skill of those who create and use it, and the substantial moral authority wielded by village craftspeople. He reveals the complexities involved in the process of change, both natural and enforced. Al-Hiba contains the remains of Sumerian people who lived in the marshes more than 5,000 years ago in a similar ecological setting, using similar material resources. The archaeological evidence provides insights into everyday life in antiquity. Ochsenschlager enhances the comparisons of past and present by extensive illustrations from his fieldwork and also from the University Museum's rare archival photographs taken in the late nineteenth century by John Henry Haynes. This was long before Saddam Hussein drove one of the tribes from the marshes, forced the Bedouin to live elsewhere, and irrevocably changed the lives of those who tried to stay.


Human Rights and Refugees, Internally Displaced Persons and Migrant Workers

Human Rights and Refugees, Internally Displaced Persons and Migrant Workers

Author: Anne Fruma Bayefsky

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 630

ISBN-13: 9004144838

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Examines the major issues in the field today: the theoretical challenges of international protection; lessons learned from the field including Afghanistan, Iraq and Sudan; jurisprudential responses from courts; due process issues from Europe, Canada and the United States, and the special needs of migrant workers.


The Modern History of Iraq

The Modern History of Iraq

Author: Phebe Marr

Publisher: Westview Press

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 498

ISBN-13: 0813344433

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Phebe Marr's best-selling history of modern Iraq, updated with incisive analysis of events since 2003


Climate Change Archaeology

Climate Change Archaeology

Author: Robert Van de Noort

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2013-11

Total Pages: 287

ISBN-13: 0199699550

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This pioneering study provides the theoretical basis for archaeological data to be included in climate change debate. Applying an approach which uses archaeological research as a repository of ideas and concepts, it illustrates the pathways implemented in times of climate change in the past and how these can help prepare modern communities.


Floating Islands

Floating Islands

Author: Richard J. Heggen

Publisher: Richard Heggen

Published: 2021-01-01

Total Pages: 1227

ISBN-13:

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Floating Islands in science, history, the arts and any number of sightings elsewhere


Viewing the Future in the Past

Viewing the Future in the Past

Author: H. Thomas Foster II

Publisher: Univ of South Carolina Press

Published: 2016-05-05

Total Pages: 218

ISBN-13: 1611175879

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Viewing the Future in the Past is a collection of essays that represents a wide range of authors, loci, and subjects that together demonstrate the value and necessity of looking at environmental problems as a long-term process that involves humans as a causal factor. Editors H. Thomas Foster, II, Lisa M. Paciulli, and David J. Goldstein argue that it is increasingly apparent to environmental and earth sciences experts that humans have had a profound effect on the physical, climatological, and biological earth. Consequently, they suggest that understanding any aspect of the earth within the last ten thousand years means understanding the density and activities of Homo sapiens. The essays reveal the ways in which archaeologists and anthropologists have devised methodological and theoretical tools and applied them to pre-Columbian societies in the New World and ancient sites in the Middle East. Some of the authors demonstrate how these tools can be useful in examining modern societies. The contributors provide evidence that past and present ecosystems, economies, and landscapes must be understood through the study of human activity over millennia and across the globe.


Building from Scrap

Building from Scrap

Author: Umut Kuruüzüm

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2022-05-24

Total Pages: 207

ISBN-13: 3030922200

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This book is about the flourishing scrap recycling industry, reconstruction, and state-making in Iraqi Kurdistan within the wider conditions of the war economy, ruination, and state disintegration in Iraq. Through a dialectical relationship between the afterlife and continuity of war over distinct but conjoined landscapes, it examines industrial work, labouring, and statelessness on a frontier territory near the self-proclaimed Islamic State (ISIS). By documenting the advance of the global steelmaking industry, the spread and erosion of selective state sovereignty, and the struggle of dispossessed workers, the book sketches the economic geography of a contemporary market expansion over the northeast of Iraq in a relational and dynamic way.