Dear Colleagues and Friends,   

please consider submitting your work to our special issue, which has now a final extended deadline of the 31 March 2022.  

Best wishes, 

Yama 

 

Submit a Manuscript to the Journal
Business History

For a Special Issue on
Exploring Business History of the Middle East and North Africa Region 

https://think.taylorandfrancis.com/special_issues/exploring-business/ 

Extended Deadline: 31 March 2022 

 

Special Issue Editor(s) 

Vijay Pereira, NEOMA Business School, Reims Campus, France
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Yama Temouri, Khalifa University, UAE and Aston University, UK
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Shlomo Tarba, University of Birmingham, UK
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Behlül Üsdiken, Sabanci University and Özyeğin University, Turkey
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Neveen Abdelrehim, Newcastle University, UK
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Exploring Business History of the Middle East and North Africa Region 

Special Issue Call-for-Papers on
Exploring Business History of the Middle East and North Africa Region 

Background:
The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region is currently growing and is seen to be one of the emerging business and economic regions of the world, with much happening recently. However, the MENA region has always been historically involved in global trade (Gelderblom and Trivellato, 2019, Aldous, 2019). In fact, before the Americas were discovered (end of the fifteenth century period), the Middle East region played an important role in world trade, and this included the famed West-East and East-West trade (Pereira and Malik, 2013; 2015; 2018). More specifically, the main West-East trade included the ‘Silk Road/Route’, that ran across the region from historical cities such as Aleppo to Baghdad, Rayy, Nishapur, Marv, and Samarkand, and through Kashgar to the T'ang capital, Chang'an (Xi'an) regions. Similarly, when it came to the East-West trade, items such as silk, porcelain, spices, dates, textiles, and horses moved in the opposite direction. 

The slave trade also saw gold being traded from Sub-Saharan Africa and transported across the desert in exchange for textiles and salt. As a consequence, slaves were brought from East Africa to Egypt and to the Indian subcontinent in return for spices and textiles (Pereira and Malik, 2015; 2018). Other items such as food grain and salt were imported into Anatolia and further east from northern Europe. Dates also formed a major export to Europe from the Arab world, as was ivory and gold from sub-Saharan Africa.

Historically, cross border business involving this region dates back to the regime of the Ottoman Empire, which saw a significant trade between Western countries, and this was prevalent even during the wars. Thereafter, the Levant Company (founded in 1581, when agreements were enacted with France in 1569, when France took over from Venice as the leading trading nation in the Levant); the English East India Company (founded in 1600); and the Dutch East India Company (founded in 1602), all traded with the MENA countries (Pereira and Malik, 2015; 2018). 

Thematic areas of the special issue: 

 

Submission Instructions 

Review Process Timeline:
Submission due date: March 31, 2022
A special issue conference and paper development workshop is proposed at NEOMA Business School, France: April, 2022.
Similar, proposed special issue conference and paper development workshop at Newcastle University Business School, UK: June 1-3, 2022
First revision due date: August 1, 2022
Second round decisions: November 1, 2022
Second revision due date: February 1, 2023
Third round decisions: April 1, 2023
Final editorial decisions: June 15, 2023 

 


Dr Yama Temouri,
Economics and Strategy Group,
Aston Business School,
Aston University,
B4 7ET
tel. +44 (0) 121 204 3244

fax. +44 (0) 121 204 3306

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