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ID090263
Title ProperNation of bureaucrats
Other Title Informationpolitical participation and economic diversification in Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates
LanguageENG
AuthorHerb, Michael
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Not long ago, two safe generalizations could be made about the Gulf monarchies: ruling families dominated their politics, and oil dominated their economies. In recent years that has begun to change. In Kuwait the parliament challenges the political predominance of the ruling family. Meanwhile, Dubai and, increasingly, the other emirates of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have made real progress in diversifying their economies away from oil-at least until the recent economic crisis. Yet political liberalization and economic diversification have not gone hand in hand: Kuwait's economy remains dependent on oil, and the United Arab Emirates remains resolutely authoritarian. This is no accident. Kuwait's high level of political participation encourages its dependence on oil while the UAE's economic diversification requires a lack of political participation by citizens. The reasons for this are specific to the peculiar political economy of these labor markets: in these richest of rentier-states, there is little need for the class compromise between capitalists and workers on which capitalist democracy usually rests.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 41, No. 3; Aug 2009: p.375-395
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 41, No. 3; Aug 2009: p.375-395
Key WordsBureaucrats ;  Economic ;  Political Participation ;  Kuwait ;  United Arab Emirates