Theories about the politics and economics of resource-rich or “rentier” states have been around for almost four decades now (Mahdavy 1970; Beblawi 1987; Chaudhry 1997; Humphreys et al. 2007). Political scientists and economists have argued that rents have a negative impact on levels of democracy (Luciani 1987; Ross 2001), on the quality of institutions (Chaudhry 1997; Isham et al. 2005), and on economic growth (Sachs and Warner 2001). Although much debate has been conducted over these macro-correlations, far less attention has been devoted to the causal mechanisms behind them. There is still no unified theory of rentier states, and the micro-foundations of rentier systems in particular have gone largely unexplored
Increasing in countries’ natural resources especially oil always seems like it is a good thing witho...
This paper investigates the implications of the rentier theory thesis to the political changes in a ...
During the Arab Spring the idea of the Middle East as an authoritarian exception appeared to be no l...
Theories about the politics and economics of resource-rich or “rentier” states have been around for ...
This paper proposes that the Rentier State and Resource Curse theories be considered as two elements...
Rentier state theory (RST) remains the dominant literature on state-society relations in the Ar...
The Saudi academic Mamoun Fandy (1999:252-53) observes that rentier analysis dominates contemporary ...
ABSTRACT Ever since its discovery, oil and its rents have strongly impacted the development of the G...
The oil and gas-rich states of the Gulf Cooperation Council have long been treated as exceptional, w...
The Middle East’s pivotal position in a hydrocarbon-based global capitalism carries enormous ramific...
There are two established ways of recounting the emergence of the modern Gulf oil monarchies. The so...
The political economies of the oil rich GCC countries are generally contextualized within the framew...
This article aims to analyze the implications of the Arab uprisings on the Rentier State Theory (RST...
Despite the fact that ‘rent’ underpins both Rentier State (RS) and Resource Curse (RC) theses, exter...
The Middle Eastern political economy has long been studied through the prism of the resource curse—t...
Increasing in countries’ natural resources especially oil always seems like it is a good thing witho...
This paper investigates the implications of the rentier theory thesis to the political changes in a ...
During the Arab Spring the idea of the Middle East as an authoritarian exception appeared to be no l...
Theories about the politics and economics of resource-rich or “rentier” states have been around for ...
This paper proposes that the Rentier State and Resource Curse theories be considered as two elements...
Rentier state theory (RST) remains the dominant literature on state-society relations in the Ar...
The Saudi academic Mamoun Fandy (1999:252-53) observes that rentier analysis dominates contemporary ...
ABSTRACT Ever since its discovery, oil and its rents have strongly impacted the development of the G...
The oil and gas-rich states of the Gulf Cooperation Council have long been treated as exceptional, w...
The Middle East’s pivotal position in a hydrocarbon-based global capitalism carries enormous ramific...
There are two established ways of recounting the emergence of the modern Gulf oil monarchies. The so...
The political economies of the oil rich GCC countries are generally contextualized within the framew...
This article aims to analyze the implications of the Arab uprisings on the Rentier State Theory (RST...
Despite the fact that ‘rent’ underpins both Rentier State (RS) and Resource Curse (RC) theses, exter...
The Middle Eastern political economy has long been studied through the prism of the resource curse—t...
Increasing in countries’ natural resources especially oil always seems like it is a good thing witho...
This paper investigates the implications of the rentier theory thesis to the political changes in a ...
During the Arab Spring the idea of the Middle East as an authoritarian exception appeared to be no l...