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The failed emergence of Egypt, Turkey and Iran

by Samir Amin

These three Middle Eastern states should normally have been found in
lists of today’s ‘emerging’ states. They have each attempted, in the
past, to modernise as a response to the challenge from Europe. Egypt
attempted this under Pacha Mohamed Ali of the nineteenth century, as
well as under Nasser. In Ottoman Turkey the Tanzimats (a
reorganisation aimed at modernising the state) and later endeavours
during the time of Ataturk (1920-1945) can be seen as the same, while
Iran began with its revolution in 1907, and later the reign of Reza
Palavi (until 1979). These were, in their own manner, leaders in
modernising transformation of capitalist peripheries in the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries. However today none of these three states
could reasonably be called ‘emerging’, not in the same way as China,
South Korea, South Africa, Brazil, Argentina and others.

see full text at:
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/83115

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