ABSTRACT

This book explores the conditions of state formation and survival in the Middle East. Based on Historical Sociology, it provides a model for study of the state in the Arab world and a theory to explain its survival.

Examining states as a ‘process’, the author argues that what emerged in the Middle East in the beginning of the twentieth century are ‘social fields’—where states form and deform—and not states as defined by Max Weber. He explores the constitutions of these fields—their cultural, material and political structures—and identifies three stages of state development in which different cases can be located. Capturing the dilemmas that ‘late-forming states’ face as regimes within them cope with domestic and international pressure, the author illustrates several Middle East cases and presents a detailed analysis of state developments in Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

He maintains that more than the domestic characteristics of individual states, state survival in the Middle East is also a function of the anarchic nature of the international (and by extension the regional) states-system.

The first to raise the question on the survivability of the territorial states in the Middle East while engaging with both International Relations and Comparative Politics theories, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of Middle East politics, Comparative Politics and International Relations.

chapter |7 pages

Prologue

chapter |21 pages

States and Social Fields

chapter |20 pages

Constructing the Middle East

International Anarchy, Indigenous Responses

chapter |19 pages

The Late-Forming State

Ontology, Dilemmas and Conditions of Survival

chapter |33 pages

Saudi Arabia

The Survival of a Homogeneous State

chapter |35 pages

Iraq

The Survival of a Divided State

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

Why do States Survive in the Middle East?