Oil States in the New Middle East: Uprisings and stability

Forside
Kjetil Selvik, Bjørn Olav Utvik
Routledge, 16. juli 2015 - 226 sider

Oil has been central to regime survival for oil states across the Arabian Peninsula and has been at the heart of their attempts to defuse the wave of Arab revolutions. However, in 2011 revolution hit Libya, the most oil dependent regime in the Middle East. The political storm winds that have swept this region have thrown into doubt the resilience of Arab rentier states, and highlight how the political effects of oil vary across the oil producing countries.

Oil States in the New Middle East brings together leading experts to critically assess the centrality of oil and the relevance of Rentier State Theory in light of the post-2011 upheaval across the Middle East and North Africa. It combines overall reflections on the political dynamics in oil states with focused case investigations of individual countries. Taking as its starting point the centrality of oil in explanations of regime survival, the book analyses how the oil states have responded to and fared throughout the Arab popular upheavals, resulting in a critical assessment of the continued relevance of Rentier State Theory. While observers have asked how the uprisings varied between oil and non-oil states, this book turns the comparative focus inward, arguing for a more fine-grained understanding of the political effects of oil in different oil producing countries.

This book would be of interest to students and scholars of Middle East, North Africa and Gulf Studies, Oil and Politics, as well as Comparative Politics and International Political Economy.

 

Innhold

the rentier bargain at the trial of the Arab uprisings
1
lessons from the Arab uprisings
18
3 Youth and the Arab revolutions
39
4 Guest workers as a barrier to democratization in oilrich countries
57
5 Back to the Seventies? Saudi youth and the kingdoms political economy after the Arab uprisings
70
the politics of crisis
93
rentierism and beyond
113
can a fractured rentier state be rebuilt?
132
reclaiming ownership to revolution
151
the dynamics of the 2011 revolution
170
11 On the economic causes of the Arab Spring and its possible developments
188
Index
205
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Om forfatteren (2015)

Kjetil Selvik is Senior Researcher at the Chr. Michelsen Institute and Adjunct Associate Professor at the Department of Comparative Politics, University of Bergen.

Bjørn Olav Utvik is Professor in Middle East History and Director of the Centre for Islamic and Middle East Studies at the University of Oslo.

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