Although all Arab monarchies (Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Jordan and Morocco) witnessed varying degrees of mass protest during the Arab uprisings of 2011, none of the kings and princes has thus far been deposed. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia saw pockets of sporadic protest in many cities in the early months of 2011, but those failed to evolve into a mass protest movement across the country. This paper analyzes the conditions that led to Saudi stability, attributing it to a combination of domestic and regional factors. The paper also highlights how the conditions that led to monarchical resilience over the last five years may result in unexpected upheavals in the future
Focusing on the domestic and regional approaches of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia post-Arab spring, th...
AN ASSESSMENT OF THE ARAB SPRING IN BAHRAIN Year 2011 marked a turning point in the contemporary hi...
Arab Monarchical States still remain in the contemporary world. This fact is contradictory to the fa...
Although all Arab monarchies (Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Jordan and Morocco) witnessed vary...
Although all Arab monarchies (Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, Jordan and Morocco) witnesse...
While the revolutions of the 2011 Arab Spring deposed and replaced previously embedded autocratic re...
This study is primarily about regime survival. Applying some aspects of rentier-state model, the met...
Why the uprisings that broke out across the Middle East and North Africa in 2010-11 ousted the leade...
Why the uprisings that broke out across the Middle East and North Africa in 2010-11 ousted the leade...
Why the uprisings that broke out across the Middle East and North Africa in 2010-11 ousted the leade...
The Arab uprisings posed serious challenges to Saudi Arabia at the level of society and leadership. ...
The Arab uprisings posed serious challenges to Saudi Arabia at the level of society and leadership. ...
The paper evaluates three common perspectives used by scholars to explain the resilience of Middle E...
The New Middle East is one of the first comprehensive books to critically examine the Arab popular u...
Focusing on the domestic and regional approaches of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia post-Arab spring, th...
Focusing on the domestic and regional approaches of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia post-Arab spring, th...
AN ASSESSMENT OF THE ARAB SPRING IN BAHRAIN Year 2011 marked a turning point in the contemporary hi...
Arab Monarchical States still remain in the contemporary world. This fact is contradictory to the fa...
Although all Arab monarchies (Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Jordan and Morocco) witnessed vary...
Although all Arab monarchies (Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, Jordan and Morocco) witnesse...
While the revolutions of the 2011 Arab Spring deposed and replaced previously embedded autocratic re...
This study is primarily about regime survival. Applying some aspects of rentier-state model, the met...
Why the uprisings that broke out across the Middle East and North Africa in 2010-11 ousted the leade...
Why the uprisings that broke out across the Middle East and North Africa in 2010-11 ousted the leade...
Why the uprisings that broke out across the Middle East and North Africa in 2010-11 ousted the leade...
The Arab uprisings posed serious challenges to Saudi Arabia at the level of society and leadership. ...
The Arab uprisings posed serious challenges to Saudi Arabia at the level of society and leadership. ...
The paper evaluates three common perspectives used by scholars to explain the resilience of Middle E...
The New Middle East is one of the first comprehensive books to critically examine the Arab popular u...
Focusing on the domestic and regional approaches of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia post-Arab spring, th...
Focusing on the domestic and regional approaches of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia post-Arab spring, th...
AN ASSESSMENT OF THE ARAB SPRING IN BAHRAIN Year 2011 marked a turning point in the contemporary hi...
Arab Monarchical States still remain in the contemporary world. This fact is contradictory to the fa...