The Repercussions, Present Reality and Future Trajectories of the Gulf Crisis: a Forecasting Approach

Volume 5|Issue 27| Jul 2017 |Articles

Abstract

This paper will attempt to approach the present crisis between Qatar and a group of four countries formed of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt from a number of perspectives. The complexity of the present situation means that a process of deconstruction is required before the problem can be solved. Specifically, the present crisis reveals how the countries involved are both intertwined and in conflict, simultaneously; and how the players in question are in conflict over attempts to undo the Arab Spring. The conflicts between Qatar and the remaining countries have roots which stretch into history, and they also demonstrate that any belief that the birth of the modern nation-state would end those rivalries was misguided.
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a professor of political sociology at Kuwait University, and previously served as editor in chief of Kuwaiti periodicals and general secretary for the National Council for Culture, Arts and Letters. An adviser to the Prime Minister's Office, he is also a member of several research institutions and intellectual journals and magazines. He has a number of published books on development in the Gulf and on Arab culture. He obtained his doctoral degree in Social Sciences from Durham University in 1973.

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