"Since the discovery of oil, the political entities of the Persian Gulf have transformed themselves from desert sheikhdoms into modern states. The process was accompanied by rapid population growth. During the last 50 years, the population of the current Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, grew from 4 million in 1950 to 33.4 million in 2004, thus recording one of the highest rates of population growth in the world."(...
- The area of the GCC is bigger than West Europe. They are one of the major poles of international e...
Population change is dramatic in many parts of the world mainly because of economic reason on the on...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018Both Bahrain and Kuwait’s monarchies use citizenship a...
Migrants represent between one-third and four-fifths of the population in the Gulf States. Despite t...
The immigration rate in the Gulf Cooperation Council states (GCC) has reached such levels that loca...
This thesis is a study of statelessness in Kuwait between 1959 and 2009. The population...
The massive influx of foreign residents and workforce led to the exacerbation of the demographic imb...
This dissertation examines the development and enforcement of citizenship and immigration policies i...
It is difficult to give precise figures of the number of statelesspersons in the Arab region. Most c...
This article argues that in the Gulf, contrary to other regions of the world, the necessity to contr...
After an Anglo-Persian geologist by the name of P.T. Cox produced the first evidence of oil in 1931,...
Kuwait\u27s economy has grown substantially during the last few decades because of massive oil reven...
Oil wealth has transformed Kuwait within decades from a modest, trade-based desert emirate into a mo...
After the discovery of oil, many Arab Gulf States failed to diversify and expand their economies bey...
Migrants make up a greater proportion of the workforce in the Arabian peninsula than perhaps in any ...
- The area of the GCC is bigger than West Europe. They are one of the major poles of international e...
Population change is dramatic in many parts of the world mainly because of economic reason on the on...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018Both Bahrain and Kuwait’s monarchies use citizenship a...
Migrants represent between one-third and four-fifths of the population in the Gulf States. Despite t...
The immigration rate in the Gulf Cooperation Council states (GCC) has reached such levels that loca...
This thesis is a study of statelessness in Kuwait between 1959 and 2009. The population...
The massive influx of foreign residents and workforce led to the exacerbation of the demographic imb...
This dissertation examines the development and enforcement of citizenship and immigration policies i...
It is difficult to give precise figures of the number of statelesspersons in the Arab region. Most c...
This article argues that in the Gulf, contrary to other regions of the world, the necessity to contr...
After an Anglo-Persian geologist by the name of P.T. Cox produced the first evidence of oil in 1931,...
Kuwait\u27s economy has grown substantially during the last few decades because of massive oil reven...
Oil wealth has transformed Kuwait within decades from a modest, trade-based desert emirate into a mo...
After the discovery of oil, many Arab Gulf States failed to diversify and expand their economies bey...
Migrants make up a greater proportion of the workforce in the Arabian peninsula than perhaps in any ...
- The area of the GCC is bigger than West Europe. They are one of the major poles of international e...
Population change is dramatic in many parts of the world mainly because of economic reason on the on...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018Both Bahrain and Kuwait’s monarchies use citizenship a...