Risiko und Unsicherheit in der modernen islamischen Praxis
Das Versicherungswesen im Iran von den Anfängen bis in die Gegenwart
Author(s)
Forian-Szabo, Viktor
Collection
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)Language
GermanAbstract
The principle of insurance as a calculable assumption of risk emerged in Europe as early as the late Middle Ages. Despite their high economic relevance, however, they were not fully institutionalized in law until the 19th century. In the Islamic world, on the other hand, insurance was virtually unknown until the time of colonialism. As a Western cultural import, it was then viewed with extreme skepticism and was the subject of heated debate. The “Islamic revival” of the 1970s in particular gave these debates new impetus. Viktor Forian-Szabo traces the development of the insurance industry in the specific context of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Drawing on interdisciplinary perspectives and methods, he succeeds in identifying the key factors that characterize the establishment of the commercial insurance industry in Iran's particular political, legal, economic and climatic environment.
Keywords
Iran, Islam, insurance, history, Reza Shah, development, Islamic law, colonialism, society, cultural import, privatization, Islamic revival, nationalization, cultural import, insurance industryDOI
10.26530/20.500.12657/92422ISBN
9783732910793, 9783732988440, 9783732988433Publisher
Frank & TimmePublisher website
https://www.frank-timme.de/Publication date and place
Berlin, 2024Series
Leipzig Middle East Studies, 7Classification
Cultural studies
Insurance law
Islamic life and practice
Iran
19th century, c 1800 to c 1899
20th century, c 1900 to c 1999
21st century, c 2000 to c 2100