This paper gives a detailed, insider's look into the history and intricacies of the royal politics of the Āl Saﺀūd examining the factors that characterize and define the course of modern Saudi Arabia from tribal affiliations to Wahhābī muṭāwﺩah and muftis. The author examines the internal power struggles amidst the famous ‘Sudeiri Seven’ and their rival claimants to the throne as well as repercussions of the system and its underpinnings on the population as a whole. Oil, power‐politics, alliances with the United States and the particular means and apparatuses of control emanating from the Najd all factor in a regime that has marginalized significant sectors of society from inhabitants of the Ḥijāz to the Shīﺀah of the Eastern Province and which may or may not survive the effects of a population boom and high unemployment that coincide with an ever‐increasing number of claimants to a rule predicated on the ‘custodianship’ of Islam's two holiest cities.
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January–March 2009
Research Article|
January 01 2009
From fragility to stability: a survival strategy for the Saudi monarchy
May Yamani
May Yamani
Carnegie Middle East Center, Beirut, Lebanon
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Corresponding Address: Email: info@carnegie-mec.org
Contemporary Arab Affairs (2009) 2 (1): 90–105.
Citation
May Yamani; From fragility to stability: a survival strategy for the Saudi monarchy. Contemporary Arab Affairs 1 January 2009; 2 (1): 90–105. doi: https://doi.org/10.1080/17550910802576114
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