Political Economy Project, Middle East and Islamic Studies (GMU), Center for Arab Contemporary Studies (Georgetown), and Arab Studies Institute Present:
Adam Hanieh
MONEY, MARKETS, AND MONARCHIES
THE GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL AND THE POLITICAL ECONOMY
OF THE CONTEMPORARY MIDDLE EAST
Friday, June 7, 5:00 pm
Merten Hall 1204
GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY
In Money, Markets, and Monarchies (Cambridge University Press, 2018), Adam Hanieh examines how the six states of the Gulf Cooperation Council are powerfully shaping the political economy of the wider Middle East. Through unprecedented and fine-grained empirical research - encompassing sectors such as agribusiness, real estate, finance, retail, telecommunications, and urban utilities - the book lays out the pivotal role of the Gulf in the affairs of other Arab states, and asks what this might mean for the future of the region. This vital feature of the Middle East's political economy is essential to understanding contemporary regional dynamics, not least of which is the emergence of significant internal tensions within the Gulf itself.
Dr. Adam Hanieh is a Reader in Development Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. His research focuses on the political economy of the Middle East, migration, and class/state formation in the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council. He is a member of the advisory board of the Centre for Palestine Studies (SOAS) and co-chair of the Centre for Migration and Diaspora Studies (SOAS).
Open to the Public | Food and Drink Served
R E V I E W S
'This brilliant book by one of the most thoughtful scholars of the Gulf states is deeply researched, coruscatingly lucid, and profoundly important. It shows all the ways in which Gulf capital permeates and shapes Middle Eastern economies, in the agricultural, construction, industrial and banking sectors. It carefully traces the processes of financialisation that are so fundamental to Gulf capital accumulation and shows the political effects of Gulf capital's economic power. In so doing Hanieh casts an urgently needed light on the machinery of Middle Eastern political economy and social relations.’
Laleh Khalili - School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
'Framed by a sophisticated spatial analysis that rejects a sharp distinction between class and state, Adam Hanieh decisively establishes that we cannot understand the Gulf solely through the lens of oil. The GCC countries have become increasingly prominent in the international circulation of money, commodities, and people. Money, Markets, and Monarchies demonstrates that Gulf capital is a central factor in both global capitalism and the broader political economy of the Middle East and North Africa. Money, Markets, and Monarchies should change the way we view the region and its place in the world.’
Joel Beinin - Stanford University, California
'In this well researched and lucid book, Hanieh convincingly illustrates how the GCC is embedded in international and regional circuits of accumulation. By stitching together various vectors of neoliberal capitalism, Money, Markets, and Monarchies, helps us understand how class relations are reproduced within the Gulf region as well as the Arab Middle East. As such, it is essential reading for scholars of the Middle East as well as all who are interested in the processes that have produced wealth and inequalities internationally in recent decades.’
Arang Keshavarzian - author of Bazaar and State in Iran: the Politics of the Tehran Marketplace