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Quick immersions and the study of Middle East politics
In: International area studies review: IASR, Band 26, Heft 2, S. 125-143
ISSN: 2049-1123
This study uses "quick immersions" in Middle East politics to investigate the role that a short, yet immersive fieldwork stay can play in generating social scientific and pedagogic insights. Using three "quick immersions" in Middle East politics, this article argues that although having an extended amount of time in the field is ideal, especially when committed to obtaining "an ethnographic sensibility," a quick immersion is better than no immersion. A quick immersion is not a substitute for an extended field stay. Its primary advantage is making fieldwork possible when time, finances, logistics, and other contextual, professional, or personal constraints prohibit a longer stay. A quick immersion is an adaptation to the constraints that might lead scholars to forego fieldwork otherwise. This study aims to dispel disparaging notions that short fieldwork trips equate with mere academic tourism, by considering the outcomes of three short immersive fieldwork trips to the Middle East: six months in UAE (2013), two months in Qatar (2013), and one month in Lebanon (2017). Although the immersion in UAE was three times longer than the immersion in Qatar, and six times longer than the immersion in Lebanon, the insights yielded from all three case studies were equally meaningful for understanding Middle East politics in ways not possible without fieldwork.
Saudi Women Driving Change? Rebranding, Resistance, and the Kingdom of Change
In: The Journal of the Middle East and Africa, Band 11, Heft 1, S. 87-109
ISSN: 2152-0852
Food Security, Obesity, and the Politics of Resource Strain in Kuwait
In: World medical & health policy, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 255-277
ISSN: 1948-4682
This study considers Kuwait's food security strategies in light of the country's environmental challenges. It examines the case of a country that relies on food imports, which are increasingly subject to supply and price shocks, and has one of the world's highest obesity rates, highest water use rates per capita, and one of the largest per capita waste footprints globally. The explanations for this curious situation include cultural, political, economic, and environmental variables supported by data collected between 2009 and 2014 using ethnographic research methods and participant observation in Kuwait. This article contributes to an emerging body of scholarship on new security challenges in the Arabian Gulf, and is one of the first to consider the national security implications of public health and resource strain in Kuwait, using ethnographic research methods.
Gary Bunt, iMuslims: Rewiring the House of Islam, Islamic Civilization and Muslim Networks (Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 2009). Pp. 384. $69.95 cloth, $24.95 paper
In: International journal of Middle East studies: IJMES, Band 44, Heft 3, S. 612-614
ISSN: 1471-6380
Egypt: building an information society for international development
In: Review of African political economy, Band 30, Heft 98, S. 627-642
ISSN: 0305-6244
World Affairs Online
Egypt: building an information society for international development
In: Review of African political economy, Band 30, Heft 98
ISSN: 1740-1720
This article examines Egypt's attempt to build an information society for international development as defined by four key variables: an IT infrastructure, a knowledge economy, a public culture of discursive openness, and formal legal institutions which support the digital age. The main finding is that given serious infrastructural challenges, as well as a tendency towards political and economic centralisation, the efforts of a series of government-led projects are unlikely to affect all but the top of the Egyptian social pyramid for the immediate future.
MARY ANN TÉTREAULT, Stories of Democracy: Politics and Society in Contemporary Kuwait (New York: Columbia University Press, 2000). Pp. 318. $18.50 paper
In: International journal of Middle East studies: IJMES, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 661-663
ISSN: 1471-6380
In her pivotal work on Kuwaiti politics, Mary Ann Tétreault provides an
"insider's guide" to the private and public spaces in which struggles over
communal power are pursued by the government, the Parliament, and the people of Kuwait.
Tétreault is careful to call her text "Stories of Democracy," as she realizes
the reflexive nature of what democracy means at different periods in history (before oil, after oil,
under Iraqi occupation, in post-Liberation Kuwait); for different people in Kuwait (women, the
merchants, government officials, tribal leaders, service politicians, opposition leaders); and in
different contexts (the mosque, the diwaniyya or men's social club, the civic
association, Parliament, the government). With this in mind, she argues that
"democracy" is a "concept that 'moves' depending on
one's assumptions" (p. 3). Her basic message is that Kuwaiti politics resembles the
politics of the Greek city-state, and she relies on various forms of Aristotelian comparison to
explore this concept. Moreover, Tétreault illustrates that much of Kuwaiti politics
resembles a high-stakes soap opera. For example, she calls the bad debt crisis "one of the
longest running soap operas in Kuwaiti politics" (p. 164). In Chapter 4, she labels Kuwaiti
politics "a family romance, whose grip on political actors constrains their choices"
(p. 67). Toward the end of her text in chapter 8, Tétreault combines these metaphors
when she observes that in the city-state that is Kuwait, politics are "the product of a
domestic public life that seems all too often like life in a large and contentious family" (p.
206).
New Media in the Muslim World: The Emerging Public Sphere, edited by Dale F. Eickelman and Jon W. Anderson. (Indiana Series in Middle East Studies) 213 pages, bibliography, index. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1999. $19.95 (Paper) ISBN 0-253-21329-0
In: Middle East Studies Association bulletin, Band 35, Heft 1, S. 135-136
Studying Palestinian-Israeli Relations at the Vanderbilt Television News Archive (VTNA)
In: Middle East Studies Association bulletin, Band 34, Heft 1, S. 38-40
For the Past Five Decades, media texts, broadcast over television air waves, have created a shared identity among viewing audiences. John B. Thompson notes that if culture is understood as "the ways in which meaningful expressions of various kinds are produced, constructed and received by individuals", then mass media can be understood as central to the creation and maintenance of culture (pp. 122-23). The words and images that construct a media culture are the very building blocks of collective identity. As Michael Schudson observes, "news is part of the background through which and with which people think" (p. 16).
New media, globalization and Kuwaiti national identity
In: The Middle East journal, Band 54, Heft 3, S. 432-444
ISSN: 0026-3141
Feldforschung der Autorin über neue Medien in Kuwait hat ergeben, dass sich das kuwaitische nationale Bewusstsein trotz des Zugangs zu den unterschiedlichsten Informationsquellen, insbesondere via Internet und Satellitenfernsehen, nicht verändert hat. Neue Kommunikationstechnologien und ausländische Medien werden als Bereicherung empfunden, aber ihre Nutzung ist nicht Ausdruck einer vielfach behaupteten Globalisierung der Kultur zulasten der eigenen kulturellen Autonomie sondern eine Adaption neuer Techniken an kulturelle Traditionen. (DÜI-Hns)
World Affairs Online
Michael Keren, Professionals against Populism: The Peres Government and Democracy, SUNY Series in Israeli Studies (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1995). Pp. 154
In: International journal of Middle East studies: IJMES, Band 30, Heft 3, S. 453-454
ISSN: 1471-6380
Global Culture or Culture Clash: New Information Technologies in the Islamic World—A View From Kuwait
In: Communication research, Band 25, Heft 4, S. 359-376
ISSN: 1552-3810
Theories about the impact of the information revolution on the developing world stress the inevitability of democratization and economic privatization. This article tests some of these predictions in light of ethnographic practice using Kuwait as a case study. By studying the development of an active Internet culture in Kuwait and the persistence of traditional political and economic practices, this article provides evidence of the ways in which countries chart unique paths toward the 21st century and subsequently respond to forces of globalization. The author concludes that local cultural frameworks play an important and underrecognized role in the kinds of practices that are enabled by networked communications and adaptations to the global economy.
The Boundaries of Liberty and Tolerance: The Struggle Against Kahanism in Israel, by Raphael Cohen-Almagor. 329 pages, notes, bibliography, indices. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 1994. $34.95 (Cloth) ISBN 0-8130-1258-9
In: Middle East Studies Association bulletin, Band 32, Heft 1, S. 111-112
The Women Are Marching: The Second Sex and the Palestinian Revolution
In: Women & politics, Band 18, Heft 1, S. 112-113
ISSN: 0195-7732