The conventional historiography on popular and labor protest in the Arabian peninsula and the Gulf since the Second World War tends to ascribe a negative role to migration. Migrants-dragooned into the service of expanding oil economies-are often depicted as undermining the cohesion and efficacy of indigenous labor activism and popular protest. This article adopts a different perspective. It revisits the most important twentieth-century wave of pan-Arab, secular, republican, and socialist protest in the region-that of the 1950s and 1960s-and highlights the positive contribution migrants made. They were not just quotients of labor power, but interpretive and political subjects. Palestinians, Yemenis, and others, along with return-and circular...
The Arab spring of 2011 first reverberated in Lebanon in the form of political protest against the r...
Despite scholarly and popular hopes and predictions that the 2011 Arab Spring would mean the end of ...
The world’s highest ratio of migrants to national population is to be found in the Middle East, and...
The conventional historiography on popular and labor protest in the Arabian peninsula and the Gulf s...
This article explores the political dynamics of labor migration in the Middle East. It seeks to expl...
In this paper, I present several summary points intended to illuminate some of the practices, norms ...
Long a recipient of migrants from its surrounding areas, the Arabian Peninsula today comprises a mos...
This paper looks at migration management in the Gulf monarchies since the 1930s. It describes the dy...
This dissertation examines the lack of a noticeable indigenous labor movement in the contemporary Gu...
“Long Live the Arab Worker: A Transnational History of Labor and Empire in the Yemeni Diaspora,” exa...
This paper looks at migration management in the Gulf monarchies since the 1930s. It describes the dy...
The large-scale international movement of manpower is one of the most dramatic effects of the oil pr...
This article provides an analysis of migrations from war-torn countries to the Persian (Arabian) Gul...
This thesis deals indirectly with the current crisis in Yemen by focusing on a period in the Yemen A...
Nineteenth and twentieth century migratory networks had a formative, yet unrecognized, impact in the...
The Arab spring of 2011 first reverberated in Lebanon in the form of political protest against the r...
Despite scholarly and popular hopes and predictions that the 2011 Arab Spring would mean the end of ...
The world’s highest ratio of migrants to national population is to be found in the Middle East, and...
The conventional historiography on popular and labor protest in the Arabian peninsula and the Gulf s...
This article explores the political dynamics of labor migration in the Middle East. It seeks to expl...
In this paper, I present several summary points intended to illuminate some of the practices, norms ...
Long a recipient of migrants from its surrounding areas, the Arabian Peninsula today comprises a mos...
This paper looks at migration management in the Gulf monarchies since the 1930s. It describes the dy...
This dissertation examines the lack of a noticeable indigenous labor movement in the contemporary Gu...
“Long Live the Arab Worker: A Transnational History of Labor and Empire in the Yemeni Diaspora,” exa...
This paper looks at migration management in the Gulf monarchies since the 1930s. It describes the dy...
The large-scale international movement of manpower is one of the most dramatic effects of the oil pr...
This article provides an analysis of migrations from war-torn countries to the Persian (Arabian) Gul...
This thesis deals indirectly with the current crisis in Yemen by focusing on a period in the Yemen A...
Nineteenth and twentieth century migratory networks had a formative, yet unrecognized, impact in the...
The Arab spring of 2011 first reverberated in Lebanon in the form of political protest against the r...
Despite scholarly and popular hopes and predictions that the 2011 Arab Spring would mean the end of ...
The world’s highest ratio of migrants to national population is to be found in the Middle East, and...