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Oil, Coalitions, and Regime Durability: the Origins and Persistence of Popular Rentierism in Kuwait
by
Yom, Sean L.
in
Alliances
/ Associations
/ Authoritarianism
/ Autocracy
/ Coalitions
/ Constraining
/ Despotism
/ Dictators
/ Domestic
/ Durability
/ Economic crisis
/ Economic development
/ Forges
/ Geopolitics
/ Hydrocarbons
/ Kuwait
/ Leadership
/ Loyalty
/ National wealth
/ Oil
/ Oil industry
/ Payments
/ Petroleum
/ Petroleum industry
/ Political economy
/ Power
/ Rent-seeking
/ Rents
/ Repression (Political)
/ Social forces
/ Social Sciences
/ State power
/ Statehood
/ Strategy
/ Studies
/ Survival
/ Wealth
2011
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Oil, Coalitions, and Regime Durability: the Origins and Persistence of Popular Rentierism in Kuwait
by
Yom, Sean L.
in
Alliances
/ Associations
/ Authoritarianism
/ Autocracy
/ Coalitions
/ Constraining
/ Despotism
/ Dictators
/ Domestic
/ Durability
/ Economic crisis
/ Economic development
/ Forges
/ Geopolitics
/ Hydrocarbons
/ Kuwait
/ Leadership
/ Loyalty
/ National wealth
/ Oil
/ Oil industry
/ Payments
/ Petroleum
/ Petroleum industry
/ Political economy
/ Power
/ Rent-seeking
/ Rents
/ Repression (Political)
/ Social forces
/ Social Sciences
/ State power
/ Statehood
/ Strategy
/ Studies
/ Survival
/ Wealth
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
Oil, Coalitions, and Regime Durability: the Origins and Persistence of Popular Rentierism in Kuwait
by
Yom, Sean L.
in
Alliances
/ Associations
/ Authoritarianism
/ Autocracy
/ Coalitions
/ Constraining
/ Despotism
/ Dictators
/ Domestic
/ Durability
/ Economic crisis
/ Economic development
/ Forges
/ Geopolitics
/ Hydrocarbons
/ Kuwait
/ Leadership
/ Loyalty
/ National wealth
/ Oil
/ Oil industry
/ Payments
/ Petroleum
/ Petroleum industry
/ Political economy
/ Power
/ Rent-seeking
/ Rents
/ Repression (Political)
/ Social forces
/ Social Sciences
/ State power
/ Statehood
/ Strategy
/ Studies
/ Survival
/ Wealth
2011
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Oil, Coalitions, and Regime Durability: the Origins and Persistence of Popular Rentierism in Kuwait
Journal Article
Oil, Coalitions, and Regime Durability: the Origins and Persistence of Popular Rentierism in Kuwait
2011
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Overview
While the canonical literature on oil wealth suggests that hydrocarbon windfalls encourage repressive despotism, Kuwait provides a case of an oil-rich autocracy governing instead through popular rentierism—that is, through a broad coalition of social forces, one that furnishes enduring loyalty from below while constraining abuses of state power from above. This paper provides a theoretically guided explanation for this exceptional outcome. I argue that the Kuwaiti regime’s coalitional bargains originated in the pre-oil era, when domestic opposition and geopolitical constrictions compelled it to forge new social alliances at the dawn of modern statehood. This inclusionary strategy mediated the subsequent effect of oil rents, which the regime used to institutionalize its mass base with costly material and symbolic side payments. Such popular incorporation bound large constituent classes to the regime’s survival, precluding the need for widespread repression. After 50 years, these coalitional bargains have also proven remarkably resilient, as social actors have continued to endorse the autocratic leadership despite economic crisis and wartime defeat.
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