Title: Middle East Monarchies
1Middle East Monarchies
- Two brief cases in the nature and strategies of
autocratic rule
2Case Study Qatar
- Nature of the Regime
- Emirate absolute monarch from al-Thani clan
- No political parties or organized opposition
- Strategy 1 keep citizens happy
- Free education, health care for citizens at all
levels. Average pp annual income 20,000 - Helpful factors tiny population, lots of oil
- Population about 863,000, but only about 20 are
Qatari citizens - 90 of work force foreign
- 10 of worlds proven oil reserves
3Qatari Emirate
Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani
Al-Thani Family
Municipal Council elected, universal suffrage 29
members
Al-Shoura Consultative Council 45
members Elected appointed
4Qatar, cont.
- Strategy 2 Allow some outlets for expression
- Relative freedom of speech and expression
- Elected 29-person municipal advisory council
(currently includes one woman) - 2003 Constitution
- Guarantees of civil rights
- Home of al-Jazeera TV (private but funded by
Qatari govt)
- Strategy 3 defend tradition
- Maintain social order
- Wahabbi Islam
- Women suffrage, but strong social codes limit
public participation and work
5New Qatari Constitution some excerpts
- Article 8 The rule of the State is hereditary in
the family of Al Thani and in the line of the
male descendants of Hamad Bin Khalifa Bin Hamad
Bin Abdullah Bin Jassim. The rule shall be
inherited by the son named as Heir Apparent by
the Emir. In the case that there is no such son,
the prerogatives of rule shall pass to the member
of the family named by the Emir as Heir Apparent.
In this case, his male descendants shall inherit
the rule. - Article 67 The Emir shall discharge the following
functions1. Drawing up the general policy of the
State with the assistance of the Council of
Ministers2. Ratification and promulgation of
laws and no such law may be issued unless it is
ratified by the Emir3. Summoning the Council of
Ministers to convene at any time deemed necessary
for public interest and the Emir shall preside
over the meetings of the Council of Ministers
that he attends4. Appointment of civil servants
and military personnel and terminating their
service in accordance with the law5. Accrediting
diplomatic and consular missions6. Granting
pardon or commuting penalty in accordance with
the law7. Conferring civilian and military
orders and badges of honour in accordance with
the law8. Establishment and organization of
ministries and other Government bodies and
specifying their functions9. Establishment and
organization of such consultative bodies to
assist him in directing, supervising, and
specifying the functions of the high policies of
the State10. Any other functions vested upon him
by this Constitution or the law. - Article 76- Al-Shoura Council shall assume the
legislative authority, approve the general policy
of the Government, the budget, and it shall
exercise control over the executive authority as
specified in this Constitution. - Article 77 Al-Shoura Council shall consist of
forty-five Members thirty of whom shall be
elected by direct, general secret ballot and the
Emir shall appoint the remaining fifteen Members
from amongst the Ministers or any other persons.
The term of service of the appointed Members in
Al-Shoura Council shall expire when these Members
resign their seats or are relieved from their
posts.
6Case Study Jordan
- Created by British out of Palestine Mandate
- Constitutional monarchy
- Democratization forward and back since 1989
- Resource poor
- Average pp annual income 1,800
- Population
- About 5.7 million people (most have citizenship)
- 70-80 urban
- Social cleavages Transjordanians vs
Palestinians - 1.5 million officially displaced Palestinians
Map Human Rights Watch
A vendor in Amann. Photo taken by tourist Jordan
Klein.
7Jordan Structure of the Regime
King (Abdullah II) Can dissolve Parliament Rule
by decree Appoint PM Approve Legislation
Parliament 40-person Senate (appointed) 80-person
chamber of deputies (universal suffrage)
Prime Minister Council of Ministers (appointed
by king)
Hashemite Family
8Ruling in Jordan strategies
- Strategy 1 make maintain key alliances
- Transjordanians
- Indigenous to East Bank
- Bedouin Tribes/Army
- PLO
- Strategy 2 suppress dissent
- Suspensions of Parliament
- Temporary laws
- State Security Courts
- No politics in mosques, educational insts.,
clubs - Strategy 3 Invent tradition
9Theories on Authoritarianism the Rentier State
Rentier Statea state that receives substantial
income (rents) from foreign sources, and where
only a few people are engaged in the generation
of this wealth.
10ME Rentier states, with of government revenue
or GDP from oil or nat. gas
- Saudi Arabia 70-80 govt revenue 40 GDP
- Kuwait 40 GDP
- UAE 30 GDP
- Qatar 60 govt. revenue
- Iraq
- Iran 40-50 govt revenue
- Oman 40 GDP
- Libya 70 govt. revenue
11Why might rentier states be less democratic than
others?
- No taxation, so fewer calls for representation
- More at states disposal to put into internal
security - Economic growth not accompanied by social impacts
of conventional industrialization - State as patron