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SADIKI, LARBI (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   176536


GCC in Crisis: Explorations of ‘Normlessness’ in Gulf Regionalism / Sadiki, Larbi; Saleh, Layla   Journal Article
Sadiki, Larbi Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In a field that is so loosely theorised, an investigation into intra-GCC conflict is both apposite and challenging. Empirically, interventions by Gulf states have proliferated across the GCC and MENA since 2011. This Special Issue seeks to fill a void in scholarship by looking at the ongoing crisis through the lens of norms. A hypothesised ‘normlessness’ has taken root: a collapse of (local) guiding principles, some even laid down by member states. Disregard for norms of non-intervention, popular sovereignty, mediation, alliance-making and social solidarity poses risks for (sub)regional stability. Provisionally, one notable weakness lies in prescriptive and proscriptive (regulative) norms pertaining to intra-GCC rules of engagement.
Key Words GCC  Sovereignty  Non-Intervention  IR  Non-Western  Normlessness 
Islamic IR 
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2
ID:   176537


Regionalism in Crisis: GCC Integration without Democracy / Sadiki, Larbi   Journal Article
Sadiki, Larbi Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract At the core of “disembedded regionalism” in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is an incapacity to foster more representative forms of politics that are responsive to citizens. Instead, elite-to-elite relations are a salient feature that characterises Gulf politics. A radical re-reading of Jürgen Habermas and John Rawls, applied to the GCC in the first two decades of the 21st century, confirms that top-down management of politics is conducive to conflict and disintegration as against integration, marginalising the agenda of multi-level governance within the subregion. Set against the backdrop of the current blockade/crisis, this critical rendition throws into sharp relief the non-democratic brand of GCC regionalism.
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