Drew, Donald R., "National Reconstruction and Development Model of Lebanon", 1981
Lebanon, the country is new; Lebanese society is ancient. Lebanon’s current geographic frontiers and political institutions were defined in the Constitution of 1926 and, except for slight modifications introduced on the eve of Lebanon’s independence 1943, remain in effect. The social and cultural characteristics of Lebanese society have their origins in the Phoenician, Greco-Roman, Arab, and Ottoman civilizations. The Lebanese state, with an area of ten thousand square kilometers, and Lebanese society with a resident population of three million persons (and almost an equal number of expatriates), have a significance in the Middle East and, indeed worldwide, out of proportion to their size, owing to their role as a vital link between East and West.
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