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A contribution to the study of the moral practices of certain social groups in ancient MesopotamiaBrooks, Beatrice Allard, January 1921 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Bryn Mawr college, 1920. / Vita. Bibliography: p. [3]-5.
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Lévolution et la fin du mandat en IrakDjabri, Aounoullah-el. January 1934 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Université de Géneve. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Mosul and Mosuil historians of the Jalili era 1726-1834Kemp, P. January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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Investment criteria in development planning, theory, practice, policy /Kettoola, Jacob Joseph. January 1976 (has links)
Dissertation (PhD. in Economics)--University of Southern California, 1976. / "October 1976." Includes bibliographical references (p. 282-298).
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The role of religion in Iraqi nationalism, 1918-1932 /Lockwood-Drummond, V. O. (Violet Olga) January 1997 (has links)
This thesis proposes to deal with the Iraqi Nationalist movement from its emergence after the First World War to the establishment of an independent Iraq in 1932. During these years the British controlled Iraq under a mandate granted by the League of Nations. This, in spite of the simultaneous creation of an Iraqi monarchy. Neither the new monarch nor the people were content with the political arrangement, based as it was on foreign control, but the drive for independence emanated from a small group of political activists. Both major religious sects of Islam, Sunni and Shi'a, played a leading role in the nationalist movement; in fact, the movement cannot be understood without an appreciation of Islam, and its major variations, in Iraqi life. / A historical background highlights the conditions which allowed Iraqism to take precedent over Arabism after the war and examines the reactions of Iraqis to the invasion by modern conquerors and their later occupation. Additionally, it provides a chronological account of the important events during the mandate period and the buildup of Iraqi resentment of foreign control which precipitated their demand for self-government. / This thesis is a broad study of the nascent nationalist movement in postwar Iraq which engaged in a desperate battle to transform a mandated territory into a sovereign state. Focus is on the role religion played in its beginnings and on the contribution of both Shi'is and Sunnis whose combined and independent efforts led to the formation of modern Iraq.
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Nationalism, archaeology and ideology in Iraq from 1921 to the presentHaider, Hind A. January 2001 (has links)
This thesis examines the use of archaeology in the development of national identity in Iraq from the period before the establishment of the Hashimite monarchy in 1921 to the present Ba'th regime and S&dotbelow;addam H&dotbelow;usayn. During King Faysal I's period (1921--1933), archaeology was used to highlight the 'Arabness' of the ancient Mesopotamians so as to keep the nation on a pan-Arabist course and steer away from developing a regional identity. Iraq's pre-Islamic heritage was approached with much reserve since the government feared alienating the majority Muslim population by glorifying the country's achievements before the advent of Islam. In contrast, 'Abd al-Karim Qasim's regime (1958--1963) focused unbridled attention to the Mesopotamian heritage in an effort to distance the newly established republic from the pan-Arabists' call to join with the United Arab Republic. Between the two poles of identifying the national identity with either the Arab or Mesopotamian character, the Ba'th regime embarked on a cultural campaign that used both identities in defining the modern Iraqi man and woman. While the campaign was relegated strictly to the cultural sphere of the nation, the intent was political in that the regime shifted to stressing the Muslim-Arab identity of Iraq when appealing to support from other Arab nations; and to the pre-Islamic Mesopotamian identity when dealing with the religious and ethnic cleavages in Iraqi society.
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Negotiating identity : the Shī'ite ulama and the colonial state in Iraq, 1914-1924Chowdhury, Rashed. January 2006 (has links)
This thesis deals with the political role of the Shi`te ulama in Iraq between the British invasion of 1914 and the expulsion of leading Shi`ite mujtahids from Iraq by King Fayṣal I in 1924. The thesis argues that the conception of identity propagated by the Shi`te mujtahids underwent a transformation during this period. Whereas the mujtahids stressed the need for Islamic unity and encouraged an Iraqi national identity in the early years of this period, in later years some of them formulated a sect-based Iraqi Shi`ite identity in response to discrimination in favour of Sunnis by the monarchy.
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Reaction to crime under tribal law and modern codification in IraqKadhim, M. N. January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
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Nationalism, archaeology and ideology in Iraq from 1921 to the presentHaider, Hind A. January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Negotiating identity : the Shī'ite ulama and the colonial state in Iraq, 1914-1924Chowdhury, Rashed January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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