Abstract

AbstractThis article consists of an analysis of ethnographic material on Afghan trading networks involved in both the export of commodities from China to a variety of settings across Eurasia and the movement of ‘refugees’ from Afghanistan to Europe. Much recent work on trading networks has deployed the concept of trust to understand the functioning of such social formations. By contrast, in this article I assess the durability of Afghan networks in three ways. First, recognition of how they are polycentric and multi‐nodal. Second, how they are successful in transforming their collective aims and projects in changing shifting political and economic circumstances. Third, how they are made up of individuals able to switch their statuses and activities within trading networks over time. Furthermore, I argue that a focus on the precise ways in which traders entrust capital, people and commodities to one another, reveals the extent to which social and commercial relationships inside trading networks are frequently impermanent and pregnant with concerns about mistrust and contingency. Recognition of this suggests that scholars should focus on practices of entrustment rather than abstract notions of trust in their analyses of trading networks per se, as well as seek to understand the ways in which these practices enable actors to handle and address questions of contingency.

Highlights

  • This article consists of an analysis of ethnographic material on Afghan trading networks involved in both the export of commodities from China to a variety of settings across Eurasia and the movement of ‘refugees’ from Afghanistan to Europe

  • A consideration of the use of giraw in the case of Dil Agha tells us less about the role that Islam does or does not play in commerce than it does about the importance of specific practices of entrustment to Afghan trading networks; it is a demonstration of Afghanistan’s non-peripheral position in the Eurasian economic geography under consideration here

  • I have described the situation of Afghan trading networks in a Eurasian economic setting and analysed these in relation to models of the structure of such networks developed by historians

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Summary

Introduction

This article consists of an analysis of ethnographic material on Afghan trading networks involved in both the export of commodities from China to a variety of settings across Eurasia and the movement of ‘refugees’ from Afghanistan to Europe. A significant proportion of the first wave of Afghan officials who started to trade in cities such as Moscow and Kiev, eventually left the former Soviet Union: some sought asylum in Western countries and a smaller proportion returned to Afghanistan to take up positions in the government established after the military defeat of the Taliban in 2001/2.

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