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History |
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At the crossroads of the
Middle East today's Jordan
has seen numerous
civilizations like the
Sumerian, Assyrian,
Babylonian, the Persians,
the Seleucids, and the
Greeks. In biblical times
the Jordan territory
contained three kingdoms:
Edom in the south, Moab in
central Jordan, and Ammon in
the northern mountain areas.
The growing importance of
the trade route from Arabia
boosted in the southeast the
Nabataean kingdom with Petra
as capital. In 106 AD it
became part of the Roman
province of Arabia. The
Romans finalized in 114 the
Via Nova Traiana, an
important trade route,
linking the port of Aqaba
with Bosra in the north.
Cities like Umm Quais,
Jerash and Amman took
advantage from the close
location to this route. With
the division of the Roman
Empire in east and west in
the 4th century, Jordan
passed to the Byzantine
Empire. As the emperor
Constantine converted to
Christianity, many churches
and chapels had been also
built on Jordanian
territory. The prosperity of
this period finds it
expression in mosaic art,
still can be seen in Madaba.
In 636 the Jordan territory
was conquered by the Arabs,
establishing the Umayyad
dynasty with Damascus as
capital. The 11th and 12th
centuries were characterized
by the conflicts between the
Christian Crusaders and
Islamic forces. In 1116 the
Crusaders controlled most of
Jordan, till in 1187 sultan
Salah ad Din conquered the
area. Salah ad Din and his
successors ruled from Cairo
till the late 12th century
until they were displaced by
the Mamluks. In 1517 the
Ottoman Turks took over
Jordan and 4 centuries of
general stagnation begun. In
1908 the Hejaz Railway
opens, running from Damascus
to Medina, passing through
Jordan and gave room for
some economic development.
The Hejaz Railway was
repeatedly damaged during
the Arab Revolt,
particularly by the
guerrilla force led by the
British T. E. Lawrence,
known as Lawrence of Arabia.
After World War I the
Ottoman Empire was broken,
the major Western powers
distributed the territories
among themselves, the area
east of the Jordan River
fell to the British.
In December 1920 Transjordan
was established as British
mandate; Abdullah Bin Al
Hussein, born in Mecca,
ruled as Emir the country.
In May 1946 Transjordan
became independent and
Abdullah acted as first
king. Two years later the
country participated in the
First Palestinian War
against the new state of
Israel. At the end of the
war Jordan controlled the
West Bank. In July 1951,
King Abdullah I was shot
dead by a Palestinian in
Jerusalem while visiting the
Al Aqsa Mosque. King
Abdullah's eldest son, Talal
Ibn Abdullah, was proclaimed
king but he was deposed in
1952 because of health
reasons. During his short
reign he was responsible for
the formation of a
liberalized constitution for
the Hashemite Kingdom of
Jordan, ratified in January
1952.
His son, Hussein, ruled as
king from 1953 for 46 years
as a pragmatic ruler. He
successfully navigated the
country through several
wars, crises and pressures
from major powers like USA
and USSR, various Arab
states and Israel. In the
1967 war with Israel Jordan
lost the West Bank and had
to cope with a dramatic
increase of Palestinians
refugees. The following
years showed the rising
power of Palestinian
militants in Jordan. They
constituted a growing threat
to the sovereignty and
security of the state, and
open fighting erupted in
June 1970. In July 1971 the
Jordanian forces won a
decisive victory over the
Palestinian guerillas. In
1974 Jordan recognized the
Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) as the
sole represen-tative for the
Palestinians. In 1988 it
gives up all claims on the
West Bank, declaring it
Palestinian territory. In
1991 Jordan joined the
Middle East peace talks with
Israel. Three years later
King Hussein and the Israeli
prime minister Yitzhak Rabin
signed a treaty ending
46-year official state of
war. The agreement improved
Jordan's relations with the
USA and moderate Arab
states.
A domestic issue for
democratic development had
been in 1991 the end of
martial law, existing since
1967. The signing of a
national charter by King
Hussein and leaders of the
main political groups meant,
political parties were
permitted in exchange for
acceptance of the
constitution and the
monarchy. Following the
legalization of political
parties in 1993 Jordan held
free and fair parliamentary
elections.
King Hussein died in
February 1999 and his son
Abdullah II Bin Al-Hussein
ascended the throne. Since,
King Abdullah II has
continued his father's
commitment to creating a
strong and positive
moderating role for Jordan
within the Arab region and
the world, following a
pragmatic,
non-confrontational line in
foreign relations.
King Abdullah focuses
moreover on economic growth
and social development.
Under his reign, Jordan was
admitted to the World Trade
Organization, and ratified
agreements for the
establishment of a Free
Trade Area with the United
States of America, the
European Union, the European
Free Trade Association
countries, and sixteen Arab
countries. King Abdullah II
has also been involved in
the drive for national
administrative reform, as
well as governmental
transparency and
accountability. Also, he
supported the necessary
legislations that guarantee
women a full role in the
kingdom's socio-economic and
political life. Abdullah
actively encouraged
information technology,
democracy, liberal economic
policies and integration
with the rest of the world.
The parliamentary election
in June 2003, the first
parliamentary elections
under King Abdullah II,
resulted in a majority for
the king's supporters, win
two-thirds of the seats.
Parliamentary elections last
took place in November 2007
with independent,
pro-government candidates
winning the majority of
seats. |
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Constitution
& Government |
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The Constitution of 1952
declares Jordan a hereditary
monarchy with a
parliamentary form of
government. The constitution
stipulates the separated
powers of the state:
executive, legislative and
judicial. The king is the
most powerful figure in the
country; he is the head of
state, the chief executive
and the commander-in-chief
of the armed forces. The
king signs and executes all
laws. His veto power may be
overridden by a two-thirds
vote of both houses of the
National Assembly. He
appoints and may dismiss all
judges by decree, approves
amendments to the
constitution, declares war.
Cabinet decisions, court
judgments, and the national
currency are issued in his
name.
The king appoints the
cabinet/council of
ministers, led by a prime
minister, who is the head of
the government and a
multi-party system. The king
may dismiss other cabinet
members at the prime
minister's request. The
cabinet is responsible to
the Chamber of Deputies on
matters of general policy
and can be forced to resign
by a two-thirds vote of "no
confidence" by that body.
The Chamber of Deputies and
the House of Notables
(Senate) constitute the
legislative branch of the
government, and the two
chambers are the National
Assembly. The Chamber of
Deputies has 110 members,
104 elected for a four year
term in single-seat
constituencies and 6 female
members by a special
electoral college. Of the
110 seats, Christians are
reserved 9 seats and
Chechens/Circassians are
reserved 3. The Senate has
55 members appointed by the
king for an 4-year term.
The judicial branch is an
independent branch of the
government. The constitution
provides for three
categories of courts: civil,
religious, and special. |
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| Geography |
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Jordan shares borders with
Syria to the north, Iraq to
the north-east, the West
Bank and Israel to the west,
and Saudi Arabia to the east
and south. All these border
lines add up to 1,619 km.
The Gulf of Aqaba and the
Dead Sea also touch the
country, and thus Jordan has
a coastline of 26 km. It
shares control of the Dead
Sea with Israel, and the
coastline of the Gulf of
Aqaba with Israel, Saudi
Arabia, and Egypt. The
kingdom has an area of
92,300 sq km, much of Jordan
is covered by desert.
Jordan consists of arid
forest plateau in the east,
with highland area in the
west of arable land and
Mediterranean evergreen
forestry. The Great Rift
Valley of the Jordan River
separates Jordan, the West
Bank and Israel. The highest
point in the country is
Jabal Umm al Dami, it is
1,854 m above sea level,
while the lowest is the Dead
Sea with 420 m below sea
level. |
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| Demographics |
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In a July 2008 census, the
estimated population of
Jordan was 6,198, 677. 95-98
percent of Jordan's
population are Arabs,
Palestinians, the remaining
non-Arabs of the population
are mainly Circassians,
Chechens and Kurds. |
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| Religion |
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The population consists of
92 percent Sunni Muslims, 6
percent Christian (majority
Greek Orthodox), and 2
percent other religions like
the Druze. The percentages
vary slightly in different
cities and regions, for
instance the south of Jordan
and cities like Zarqa have
the highest percentage of
Muslims, while Amman, Madaba,
Salt, and Kerak have larger
Christian communities than
the national average, and
the town of Fuhais is
Christian.
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| Economy |
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Jordan is a small country
with limited natural
resources and a lack of
water supplies. Just over
10% of its land is arable.
The principal crops are
vegetables, wheat, citrus
fruits and olives, mostly
grown in the Jordan Valley.
Main exports are phosphates,
potash and pharmaceuticals.
The service sector accounts
for around two-thirds of
total output and covers
wholesale and retail
trading, finance, transport
and tourism. Jordan depends
on overseas remittances and
foreign aid from its
oil-rich neighboring
countries. The economical
development had been
undermined by the regional
instabilities. For instance,
Jordan suffered adverse
economic consequences from
the 1990/91 Gulf War. The
number of tourists reduced
and 300 000 returnees from
the Gulf countries increased
Jordan's unemployment rate
to 30% this year. Jordan's
economy has been liberalized
through connecting it with
partnership agreements, the
World Trade Organization and
Arab and foreign trade
areas. Jordan is a member of
various pan-Arab economic
bodies, notably the Council
of Arab Economic
Co-operation and the Arab
Monetary Fund. Jordan has a
free trade accord with the
USA and an association
agreement with the EU. Since
King Abdullah has taken
throne, he has worked very
closely with the IMF, been
careful when implementing
monetary policy, made
considerable progress with
privatization, and relaxed
the trade regime just enough
so that it has assured
Jordan's membership in the
World Trade Organization.
The economic reforms helped
Jordan become more
productive and put it on the
foreign investment map.
Jordan's main goals are to
reduce its reliance on
foreign aid, lower its
budget deficit, and increase
incentives to invest in
order to encourage job
creation. |
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| Education |
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Education has played an
important role in the
development of Jordan from
an agrarian, subsistence
economy to a predominantly
urban, industrialized
nation. All citizens in poor
and remote areas shall gain
access to education. The
government gives good
attention to education to
keep up with the demands of
global economy.
The structure of the
educational system in Jordan
consists of a two-year cycle
of pre-school education, ten
years of compulsory basic
education, and two years of
secondary academic or
vocational education. Access
to higher education is open
to holders of the General
Secondary Education
Certificate who can choose
between private Community
Colleges, public Community
Colleges or universities.
Most universities in Jordan
follow the English-American
education systems.
Bachelor's Degrees normally
take four years, for some
subjects like Dentistry five
years. A Master's degree is
awarded after a further one
to two years' study
following a Bachelor's
Degree. A Doctorate Degree
is awarded after three to
five years of further study
and the submission of an
original dissertation. |
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