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| Research Interests for Timur KuranResearch Interests:Timur Kuran’s research spans the fields of political science, economics, history, and legal studies. He has written on the economic history and modernization of the Middle East, economic development in general, the political evolution of the Middle East, the political economy of social values, religion and economics, preference falsification, the dynamics of revolutions, cascades, and cultural evolution. For the past decade his primary project has been to explain why the Middle East, once an economically advanced region of the world, subsequently failed to match the institutional transformation through which western Europe vastly increased its capacity to pool resources, coordinate productive activities, and conduct exchanges. Several mechanisms contributed to the Middle East’s economic retardation, his publications on the subject show. Certain distinctly Middle Eastern institutions, including ones rooted in Islam, unintentionally blocked the transition to the modern economy. The institutions that generated evolutionary bottlenecks include: (1) the Islamic law of inheritance, whose egalitarian character inhibited capital accumulation, (2) the strict individualism of Islamic law and its lack of a concept of corporation, which hindered organizational development and contributed to keeping civil society weak, and (3) the waqf, Islam’s distinct form of trust, which locked vast resources into inflexible organizations that tended to become dysfunctional over time. None of these institutions posed an economic disadvantage at the time of their emergence. Nor did they ever cause an absolute decline in economic activity. They turned into handicaps by perpetuating themselves during the long period when western Europe took the lead in developing the institutions of the modern economy. Kuran is now working on the puzzle of why most Middle Eastern countries are governed autocratically.
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