Skip to main content

CAIS

  • Home
  • About us
  • Study
    • Undergraduate
    • Postgraduate
    • Why Study the Region?
    • Current Courses
    • Prizes & Awards
    • Career Opportunities
  • Languages
    • Arabic
    • Persian
    • Turkish
  • Research
    • Publications
      • Books
      • Book chapters
      • Journal articles & papers
      • Other
    • Conferences
    • Past conferences
    • NEPF
  • Our People
    • Director
    • Advisory board
    • Academic Staff
    • Professional Staff
    • Current PhD Students
    • PhD Graduates
    • Visiting Academics
    • Centre Affiliates
    • Vacancies
  • Events
    • Event series
  • News
    • In the media
    • Audio/Video Recordings
  • Contact us

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeResearchPublicationsReformers and The Rentier State: Re-Evaluating The Co-Optation Mechanism In Rentier State Theory
Reformers and the Rentier State: Re-Evaluating the Co-Optation Mechanism in Rentier State Theory
Reformers and the Rentier State: Re-Evaluating the Co-Optation Mechanism in Rentier State Theory
Author/editor: Jessie Moritz
Published in (Monograph or Journal): Journal of Arabian Studies: Arabia, the Gulf, and the Red Sea
Publisher: Taylor Francis
Year published: 2018
Issue no.: CIRS SPECIAL ISSUE: The 'Resource Curse' in the Persian Gulf
Page no.: pp 46-64
Volume no.: Volume 8

Abstract

The oil and gas-rich states of the Gulf Cooperation Council have long been treated as exceptional, where distributions of rent-based wealth to society assumedly preclude political dissent. Yet, by examining informal and formal opposition in Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman since 2011, this article disputes the effectiveness of this “co-optation mechanism” at the sub-national level. Drawing from 135 semi-structured interviews conducted with citizens of these states, it uncovers evidence of challenges to state authority even among nationals who should theoretically be co-opted. In examining the limits of rent-based co-optation, the article highlights two key political dynamics that have demonstrated a capacity to overpower rent-based incentives to remain politically inactive: ideology and repression. Societies, then, were far from quiescent, and this research examines the networks and dynamics that have allowed citizens to challenge state authority.

DOI or Web link

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21534764.2018.1546933?scroll=top&amp%3BneedAccess=true