Kuwait and Al-Sabah: Tribal Politics and Power in an Oil State
Autor Rivka Azoulayen Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 ian 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780755650989
ISBN-10: 0755650980
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0755650980
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Makes a new argument about the importance of marginalized communities in regime-society relations
Notă biografică
Rivka Azoulay is a postdoctoral fellow at Sciences Po Paris, France, where she is working on a project to reform the social safety net system in Kuwait.
Cuprins
Acknowledgments Introduction: Authoritarian regimes and the crucial role of the peripheryPart I: When the past holds a mirror to the present: traditional politics and the pre-oil authority system of the Al-Sabah (1716-1938)I: Deconstructing the dominant Sunna hadar narrativeII: Communal segregation and stratification in pre-oil Kuwait: hadar, Shi'a and the early-settled tribesIII. Changes in the authority system: Mubarak Al-Sabah, colonialism and alliances with non-core elitesIV. The crystallization of alliances with non-core elites: the 1938 Majlis movementPart II. Oil and the consolidation of a tribal authoritarian shaykhdom: Ruler-ruled relations 1961-1990I: External threat consolidates inter-elite power-sharing (musharaka)II: External threat consolidates inter-elite power-sharing (musharaka)III: The rise of new middle-class elites and the decline of the hadar elitesIV: Socio-political change within Kuwait's Shi'a populationV. Competitive authoritarians: parliamentary life (1961-1990) Part III. New forces of globalization and the rise of the tribal periphery in Kuwait (1990-2014)I: The birth of a tribal oppositionII. Beyond tribalism: social dimensions of a broader middle-class struggleIII. Splits in the regime's 'asabiyya: royal infighting and successionIV. Limits of political patronage vis-à-vis non-core elites (2011-2014) ConclusionBibliography
Recenzii
This is the definitive political history of Kuwait. Rivka Azoulay examines its experiences within the context of political change in traditional societies and centre periphery relations. It is an excellent work and essential reading for those interested in the history of Arabia and the Gulf.
A magnificent volume that connects past and present to provide one of the most comprehensive books on Kuwaiti politics to date.
Rivka Azoulay's book combines ethnographic finesse with a deep grasp of Gulf historical sociology. It is, by some margin, the best piece of work on the political sociology of GCC elites. Its historical range is impressive and theoretical insights about how the Kuwaiti rentier state allies with and reshapes social groups are unique, adding a dimension of identity politics to Gulf political economy that has long been missing.
In this excellent political history, Rivka Azoulay provides a compelling explanation of the complex political dynamics between the various constituent elements of Kuwaiti society, as well as how and why the country has survived until today. What emerges is a nuanced analysis of the relationships between the Al Sabah dynasty, the tribes, the Shia and the families of urban notables. There is no better or more up-to-date study on Kuwait's history and politics.
A magnificent volume that connects past and present to provide one of the most comprehensive books on Kuwaiti politics to date.
Rivka Azoulay's book combines ethnographic finesse with a deep grasp of Gulf historical sociology. It is, by some margin, the best piece of work on the political sociology of GCC elites. Its historical range is impressive and theoretical insights about how the Kuwaiti rentier state allies with and reshapes social groups are unique, adding a dimension of identity politics to Gulf political economy that has long been missing.
In this excellent political history, Rivka Azoulay provides a compelling explanation of the complex political dynamics between the various constituent elements of Kuwaiti society, as well as how and why the country has survived until today. What emerges is a nuanced analysis of the relationships between the Al Sabah dynasty, the tribes, the Shia and the families of urban notables. There is no better or more up-to-date study on Kuwait's history and politics.