Security in the Gulf : historical legacies and future prospects

Bibliographic Information

Security in the Gulf : historical legacies and future prospects

edited by Matteo Legrenzi

Routledge, 2013

  • : pbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book examines Gulf Security in a holistic way seeing past the narrow military aspect and also trying to debunk the conventional narratives propagated by regional and external actors. In particular, the emphasis is be on the historical legacy of Gulf security and the fundamental domestic and international vulnerabilities of the various states in the region. This approach proves important in light of the recent efforts by Gulf states to recast their position in the international arena trying to peddle an image of self-assertiveness and autonomy in the security sphere. These new diplomatic stances do not seem to be borne out by their current security policies that are marked by apparent continuity with past practices. In particular, the new Gulf-Asia nexus and the claims by Gulf monarchies that regional confidence building measures are appearing on the horizon are placed under critical scrutiny. This is done by a sobering examination of the balance of threat in the region, the historical amity/enmity patterns and the evolving American stance. A shorter, modified version of this book was previously published as a special issue of the British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. From Here We Begin: A Survey of Scholarship on the International Relations of the Gulf 2. The Power of Narrative: Saudi Arabia, the United States and the Search for Security 3. La Longue Duree and Energy Security in the Gulf 4. Jihad, Yes, but not Revolution: Explaining the Extraversion of Islamist Violence in Saudi Arabia 5. Saudi Arabia and the Arab-Israeli Peace Process: The Fluctuation of Regional Coordination 6. Dubai and the United Arab Emirates: Security Threats 7. Iraq's Gulf Policy and Regime Security from the Monarchy to the post-Baathist Era 8. Islamic Utopian Romanticism and the Foreign Policy Culture of Iran

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top