qatar has been a notable exception to the wave of popular political mobilization that has struck Arab countries since January 2011. This is particularly so given the prominent role of its state-owned television station Al Jazeera in supporting many — though not all — of the uprisings. Why has Qatar been seemingly immune to the protest wave? Its wealth matters, of course, but other wealthy countries like Libya and Bahrain have experienced turmoil. Some new insights into this question can be found in the Qatar World Values Survey (QWVS), an important survey of Qatari public opinion administered in December 2010 on the eve of the Arab revolts
Rentier state theory (RST) remains the dominant literature on state-society relations in the Ar...
This article attempts to analyze the impact of current international and regional dynamics on Qatar’...
The democratic “exceptionalism” which the emirate of Kuwait boasted after 1962 did not survive the 2...
Qatar, a small country, in southern Persian Gulf, in recent years has appeared as a most welfare sta...
Over the past decade, Qatar's presence on the global and regional stages has increased immensely, dr...
This article uses rare, nationally representative survey data collected before and after the blockad...
During the Arab Spring the idea of the Middle East as an authoritarian exception appeared to be no l...
This book addresses critical topics and unanswered questions on the contemporary state of Qatar. Dra...
The study aims at defining Qatar role thorough its diplomacy with some countries and political part...
This paper argues that Qatar exercises soft power influence in a troubled region via attraction and ...
International audienceOn June 5, 2017 Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain (kno...
Popular ambiguity surrounding the relationship between Qatar, Al-Jazeera, and the latter organizatio...
Qatar is a peninsula with only one land border connecting it to Saudi Arabia. Both countries are mem...
Over the past fifty years the impoverished and tribal Arab Gulf states have become some of the most ...
Since the outbreak of the so-called Arab Spring in 2011, the regional system in the Middle East, as ...
Rentier state theory (RST) remains the dominant literature on state-society relations in the Ar...
This article attempts to analyze the impact of current international and regional dynamics on Qatar’...
The democratic “exceptionalism” which the emirate of Kuwait boasted after 1962 did not survive the 2...
Qatar, a small country, in southern Persian Gulf, in recent years has appeared as a most welfare sta...
Over the past decade, Qatar's presence on the global and regional stages has increased immensely, dr...
This article uses rare, nationally representative survey data collected before and after the blockad...
During the Arab Spring the idea of the Middle East as an authoritarian exception appeared to be no l...
This book addresses critical topics and unanswered questions on the contemporary state of Qatar. Dra...
The study aims at defining Qatar role thorough its diplomacy with some countries and political part...
This paper argues that Qatar exercises soft power influence in a troubled region via attraction and ...
International audienceOn June 5, 2017 Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain (kno...
Popular ambiguity surrounding the relationship between Qatar, Al-Jazeera, and the latter organizatio...
Qatar is a peninsula with only one land border connecting it to Saudi Arabia. Both countries are mem...
Over the past fifty years the impoverished and tribal Arab Gulf states have become some of the most ...
Since the outbreak of the so-called Arab Spring in 2011, the regional system in the Middle East, as ...
Rentier state theory (RST) remains the dominant literature on state-society relations in the Ar...
This article attempts to analyze the impact of current international and regional dynamics on Qatar’...
The democratic “exceptionalism” which the emirate of Kuwait boasted after 1962 did not survive the 2...