logo-oibr
  • OIB
    • About
    • News
    • Director's Yearly Address
      • Director's Address 2020
      • Director's Address 2019
      • Director's Address 2018
      • Director's Address 2017
    • Advisory board
    • Reports
    • Newsletter
    • In the Media
    • Gallery
  • Events
  • Research
    • Current projects
      • From Arabic to Latin: Moving sciences of music around the Mediterranean (Rosy Azar Beyhom)
      • Abrahamic Interdependence - Relationship of the Islamic to the Jewish in Marital Law (Ahmed M. F. Abd-Elsalam)
      • Lebanon’s Art World at Home and Abroad: Trajectories of artists and artworks in/from Lebanon since 1943 (LAWHA) (Nadia von Maltzahn)
      • Cultural Policies in Lebanon: Cultural Institutions between State and Society (Nadia von Maltzahn)
      • The New Testament quotations in Ibrahim al-Biqāʿīs (st. 1480) commentary on the Koran (Thomas Würtz)
      • Balance as Justice: Deconstruction of premodern ethics on the basis of Qinālīzāde ꜤḲınālīzāde ʿAlī Çelebī’s Akhlāq-i ꜤAlā’ī (Fatih Ermiş)
      • Fictio Statis (Pierre France)
      • Discourses on Statehood in Iraq (Christian Thuselt)
      • From Copying to Burning the Qur’an: Creating Models & Transposing Sacrality (Alya Karame)
      • Living in Liminality (Sarah El Bulbeisi)
      • Escape to Europe: Comparative Refugee Imaginaries (Markus Schmitz)
    • Previous projects
      • The Lebanese Intifada of October 17: Perspectives from Within (Birgit Schäbler)
      • Relations in the Ideoscape: Middle Eastern Students in the Eastern Bloc (1950's to 1991) (Birgit Schäbler)
      • Europe and the Middle East (Birgit Schäbler)
      • Picturing the (Un)Dead: Reflections and Deconstructions of Lebanese and Iranian "Martyrs" in Contemporary Photo-Related Art-Practices (Agnes Remeder)
      • Hierarchical Rationality of Religious Beliefs System in Islamic and Christian Theology (Qodratullah Qorbani)
      • The inimitability of the Qur’ān (i‘jāz al-qur’ān) in transconfessional contexts of the early ῾Abbāsid period (Hans-Peter Pökel)
      • Cultural Mobilities and Political Spaces (Christopher Bahl)
      • Al-Qadi al-Fadil (Stefan Leder)
      • Bedouin Syria (Johann Büssow)
      • Borrowing and lending (Jonathan Kriener, Ruhr-Universität Bochum)
      • Clergy and conflict management (Thomas Scheffler)
      • Higher Education and Citizenship in Egypt (Daniele Cantini)
      • History Writing at Lebanese Universities (Jonathan Kriener)
      • Knowledge in postgraduate studies (Daniele Cantini)
      • Mamâlik – Spatial Dynamics of Islamic Polities (Kurt Franz)
      • Media culture transformation (Hanan Badr)
      • Museums in Dialogue with the Future (Felicia Meynersen)
      • Political slogans (Nader Srage)
      • Political thought (Stefan Leder)
      • Rural societies in an age of urbanisation (Astrid Meier)
      • S.C.R.I.P.T. - Source Companion for the Research on Islamic Political Thought (Stefan Leder)
      • Talking about art – aesthetic reflection in Egypt and Lebanon (Monique Bellan)
      • Tracing an author’s library (Torsten Wollina)
      • A Literal World: Perceiving the World as a Linguistic Construction before the Emergence of the Metaphor in Arabo-Islamic Thought (Abdallah Soufan)
      • Open Arabic Periodical Editions (OpenArabicPE) (Till Grallert)
      • “Women on the streets!: a genealogy of food riots in the Middle East between the 18th and 20th centuries“ (Till Grallert)
  • People
    • Directorate
    • Research Associates
    • Visiting Fellows
    • Affiliated Researchers
    • Alumni
    • Library
    • Administration
    • IT
    • Publications
    • Technical Staff
    • Vacancies
      • Kinderbetreuung / Leben und Arbeiten im Libanon
  • Publications
    • BI · Bibliotheca Islamica
      • About BI
      • Recent Issues
      • Full List
    • BTS · Beiruter Texte und Studien
      • About BTS
      • Recent Issues
      • Full List
    • OIS · Orient Institut Studies
      • About OIS
      • Recent Issues
      • Full List
    • Extra Series
      • About
      • Recent Issues
      • Full List
    • Latest Publications
  • Library
    • About
      • Library Team
      • History
    • OIB Catalogues
      • GoTriple
      • OPAC
      • IPAC
    • Repositories & databases
    • Online registration
    • Collection
    • Library Regulations
  • Academic Support
    • Fellowships
      • Doctoral Fellowships
      • Postdoctoral Fellowships
      • OIB Research Relief Fellowships 2022/2023
      • Hans-Robert Roemer Fellowships
    • Affiliations
    • Internships
    • Guest rooms
Back to Events

Not-so-Failed State, Militias' Invisible Hands & Inconspicuous Civil Servants: the War-Time Lebanese Central Bank (1975-1993) as a Case of State Deformation.

Public research seminar

Orient-Institut Beirut

Wednesday, 02. June 2021, 20:00-21:30

02
June

Click here to maximize

Abstract

At its creation in the early 1960s, the BDL was an "ill-born" institution: deprived of both strong political support and founding father, it faced outright hostility from the banking sector, which then advocated for self-regulation and tried to reduce the powers of the central bank to a minimum. However, two decades later - around the end of the 1980s - this same Central Bank has become a very symbolic 'last bastion of the state' and its governor a prominent public figure. How can such a bastion emerge in the middle of a war? What does it allow us to say about the role and position of the governor or the action of the militias towards a Lebanese state they cannot fully appropriate but whose functioning and shape they changed? How this situation can lead us to pay attention to a generation of discreet statesmen in charge of the state, coping with the daily realities of war in the background of public figures? Eventually, beyond this occasion for cross-fertilization of the historiographies of the Lebanese war (1975-1991) and the Lebanese state, what sort of new elements can this research brings to the fore in order to make sense of an institution too often (and since 1993) confused with the sole person of its last and current governor?

 

Bio
 

Pierre joined the Orient Institut in 2020 as a Research Associate. A PhD candidate (defence in waiting) in Political Science at Paris 1 Sorbonne University, his doctoral research focuses on the process of the Lebanese state survival throughout the Lebanese war (1975-1990). It led him to study the Lebanese state in its material and human forms, with specific attention to several public institutions and their civil servants' histories. This research resulted also in a broad revisit of the Lebanese war based on comparative and historical sociology. Aside of his PhD, Pierre co-wrote a book with Prof. Antoine Vauchez in 2017, to be published in a revised English edition in 2021 (Cornell) on the phenomenon of top french civil servants becoming lawyers, a contribution to the study of the blurring lines between public and private social spheres in contemporary France. He has been also a full-time Junior Lecturer in Political Science at Sciences Po Aix (2016-2018).

Pierre's main research project at the OIB, "Fictio Statis. Unreliable numbers, Private Statistics and Economists’ careers in Lebanon (1950-1990)" aims at unfolding the question of numbers in Lebanon, from the mandate to the contemporary period.

 

Live Streaming Link:

https://live.starleaf.com/ODYyNzg6MDMwNzYy


Find us on Google Maps

    • footer logo
    • footer log2
    • SITEMAP
    • DATA PROTECTION DISCLAIMER
    • IMPRESSUM
    • Rue Hussein Beyhoum 44
      Zokak el-Blat
    • +9611359423
    • sek@orient-institut.org

Follow us:

© 2021, OIB All Right Reserved.Design & Developed by Comfu