Draft:Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire

Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire
AuthorNora Elizabeth Barakat
LanguageEnglish
SubjectOttoman Empire, Bedouin, Land Ownership, Bureaucracy
PublisherStanford University Press
Publication date
2023
Pages361
ISBN9781503634619

Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire is a 2023 historical book by Stanford historian Nora Elizabeth Barakat. Published by Stanford University Press, the book examines the complex relationships between the Ottoman state and Bedouin communities in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, challenging the long-held notion that Bedouin populations were peripheral to state governance. Through archival research, Barakat brings to light the ways in which Bedouin individuals and communities played active roles in Ottoman administrative and legal structures, particularly in relation to land and property management.[1]

Overview

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The book focuses on Bedouin communities in the Syrian interior during a period of Ottoman expansion and modernization. Barakat draws on a wide array of primary sources, including Ottoman Turkish and Arabic records, court documents, land registers, and imperial archives, to show how the Bedouin navigated Ottoman efforts to incorporate them into a formal legal and bureaucratic framework.[2]

Barakat traces how the Bedouin, often perceived as nomadic and stateless, engaged with Ottoman land reforms and administrative structures. They registered land, paid taxes, and took on bureaucratic roles within the state, particularly during the Ottoman government’s efforts to formalize land ownership through legal reforms. Her study challenges the binary distinction between sedentary and nomadic populations, instead highlighting the mobility of the Bedouin as a form of economic and political strategy.[3]

Themes

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Property and Land Rights

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A central theme of the book is the negotiation of land ownership and property rights between the Bedouin and the Ottoman state. Barakat demonstrates how Bedouin families utilized Ottoman legal frameworks to secure land ownership, at times resisting state efforts to expropriate their land for agricultural or settlement projects.[4]

Bureaucratic Roles

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The term "Bedouin bureaucrats" refers to individuals within these communities who took on roles within the Ottoman administrative system. These roles often included overseeing land registration, tax collection, and even acting as intermediaries between local populations and the state. The book underscores the central role that these figures played in the implementation of Ottoman policies.[4]

Comparative Imperialism

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Barakat places the Ottoman Empire’s interactions with Bedouin communities in a broader context of global imperialism, comparing the Ottoman experience with similar processes in Imperial Russia and the United States. She argues that, unlike other nomadic groups such as Native Americans or Kazakh nomads, the Bedouin were able to maintain significant control over their land and political autonomy, partly due to shared Islamic legal traditions that facilitated negotiation with Ottoman authorities.[4]

Reception

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Bedouin Bureaucrats has been praised for its innovative approach to Ottoman and Middle Eastern history. Reviewers have noted the book's meticulous research and its ability to reshape understandings of Bedouin-state relations in the late Ottoman period. The book has been discussed in academic settings, including at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University, where Barakat gave a talk on its themes and findings.[5]

In a review for the Arab Studies Journal, Lâle Can offers high praise for Nora Elizabeth Barakat’s Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire, highlighting its fresh take on the Bedouin’s role in Ottoman governance. Can emphasizes Barakat’s argument that Bedouin communities were active participants in state bureaucracy, contributing to land registration, taxation, and legal processes. Barakat successfully challenges the traditional view of Bedouin as peripheral actors, situating them within broader imperial frameworks. However, Can raises questions about the applicability of Barakat's findings to other contexts. The book is ultimately recommended for scholars of Ottoman history, political economy, and comparative empires.[6]

In his review of Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire, published in the journal Middle Eastern Studies, scholar Tancred Bradshaw commends Nora Elizabeth Barakat for her in-depth exploration of Ottoman state-building in Syria and Transjordan during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Barakat meticulously details how the Ottoman administration’s efforts to formalize land ownership, impose taxes, and manage tribal populations inadvertently bolstered the authority of tribal sheikhs, transforming them into powerful intermediaries, or "Bedouin bureaucrats." Bradshaw praises Barakat’s thorough research and her contribution to understanding the complex relationship between the Ottoman state and local tribal elites. However, he critiques the book’s forty-page conclusion, which examines British and French mandate policies after World War I, as overly long and somewhat off-topic. Bradshaw suggests that this section could have been shortened, as other studies already cover tribal policies in the post-Ottoman era. Nevertheless, he highly recommends the book to scholars interested in Ottoman imperialism, state formation, and tribal governance.[7]

In her review for The Journal of Ottoman Studies, Laura Stocker, from the University of Neuchâtel, praises Nora Elizabeth Barakat’s Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire for its detailed analysis of Bedouin leaders’ involvement in Ottoman state-building through land management, taxation, and legal processes. Stocker applauds Barakat’s fresh approach to Bedouin tribes as central actors but critiques the application of the "bureaucrat" concept to camel-breeding elites, whose influence extended beyond Ottoman state structures. She also notes the book’s limited engagement with the late 19th-century revival of the caravan trade, which saw camel-breeding economies boom and increase the political and economic leverage of Bedouin leaders as key players in regional commerce. Despite these critiques, Stocker highlights the book’s valuable contribution to Middle Eastern and Bedouin studies, particularly in its nuanced exploration of state formation and tribal dynamics in the Ottoman Empire.[8]

References

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