In this innovative legal history of economic life in the Western Indian Ocean, 2013 Transregional Research Postdoctoral fellow Fahad Ahmad Bishara examines the transformations of Islamic law and Islamicate commercial practices during the emergence of modern capitalism in the region. In this time of expanding commercial activity, a mélange of Arab, Indian, Swahili and Baloch merchants, planters, jurists, judges, soldiers and seamen forged the frontiers of a shared world. The interlinked worlds of trade and politics that these actors created, the shared commercial grammars and institutions that they developed and the spatial and socio-economic mobilities they engaged in endured until at least the middle of the twentieth century. This major study examines the Indian Ocean from Oman to India and East Africa over an extended period of time, drawing together the histories of commerce, law and empire in a sophisticated, original and richly textured history of capitalism in the Islamic world.

Publication Details

Title
A Sea of Debt: Law and Economic Life in the Western Indian Ocean, 1780–1950
Authors
Bishara, Fahad Ahmad
Publisher
University of Cambridge / Cambridge University Press
Publish Date
March 2017
ISBN
9781107155657
Citation
Bishara, Fahad Ahmad, A Sea of Debt: Law and Economic Life in the Western Indian Ocean, 1780–1950 (University of Cambridge / Cambridge University Press, March 2017).
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