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Saudi Vision 2030 and the National Transformation Plan 2020 are
governmental initiatives to diversify Saudi Arabia's economy and
implement nationwide social changes. Media and scholarly attention
often describe the success or failure of these ambitious visions.
This book shifts the focus to instead examine and evaluate the
actual processes of domestic policymaking and governance that are
being mapped out to achieve them. The book is unique in its
breadth, with case studies from across different sectors including
labour markets, defence, health, youth, energy and the environment.
Each analyses the challenges that the country's leading
institutions face in making, shaping and implementing the tailored
policies that are being designed to change the country's future. In
doing so, they reveal the factors that either currently facilitate
or constrain effective and viable domestic policymaking and
governance in the Kingdom. The study offers new and ground-breaking
research based on the first-hand experiences of academics,
researchers, policy-makers and practitioners who have privileged
access to Saudi Arabia. At a time when analysis and reportage on
Saudi Arabia usually highlights the 'high politics' of foreign
policy, this book sheds light on the 'low politics' to show the
extent to which Saudi policy, society, economics and culture is
changing.
The GCC is a major player in the post-2011 reordering of the Middle
East. Despite the rise in prominence of individual Gulf states -
especially Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates
- and the growth of the GCC as a collective entity, surprisingly
little attention has been paid to the actual mechanics of
policy-making in the region. This book analyses the vital role that
institutions are coming to play in shaping policy in the Gulf Arab
states. The research coincides with two key developments that have
given institutions new importance in the policy process: the
emergence of a new generation of leaders in the Gulf, and the era
of low oil prices. Both developments, along with dramatic
demographic change, have compelled state and citizens to
re-evaluate the nature of the social contract that binds them
together. Contributors assess the changing relationship between
state and citizen and evaluate the role that formal and informal
institutions play in mediating such change and informing policy.The
book shows how academic, social and economic institutions are
responding to the increasingly complex process of decision-making,
where citizens demand better services and further empowerment, and
states are obliged to seek wider counsel, although wanting to
retain ultimate authority. With contributions from both academics
and practitioners, this book will be highly relevant for
researchers and policymakers alike.
Saudi Vision 2030 and the National Transformation Plan 2020 are
governmental initiatives to diversify Saudi Arabia’s economy and
implement nationwide social changes. Media and scholarly attention
often describe the success or failure of these ambitious visions.
This book shifts the focus to instead examine and evaluate the
actual processes of domestic policymaking and governance that are
being mapped out to achieve them. The book is unique in its
breadth, with case studies from across different sectors including
labour markets, defence, health, youth, energy and the environment.
Each analyses the challenges that the country’s leading
institutions face in making, shaping and implementing the tailored
policies that are being designed to change the country's future. In
doing so, they reveal the factors that either currently facilitate
or constrain effective and viable domestic policymaking and
governance in the Kingdom. The study offers new and ground-breaking
research based on the first-hand experiences of academics,
researchers, policy-makers and practitioners who have privileged
access to Saudi Arabia. At a time when analysis and reportage on
Saudi Arabia usually highlights the ‘high politics’ of foreign
policy, this book sheds light on the ‘low politics’ to show the
extent to which Saudi policy, society, economics and culture is
changing.
Although the position of Saudi women within society draws media
attention throughout the world, young Saudi men remain part of a
silent mass, their thoughts and views rarely heard outside of the
Kingdom. Based on primary research across Saudi Arabia with young
men from a diverse range of backgrounds, Mark C. Thompson allows
for this distinct group of voices to be heard, revealing their
opinions and attitudes towards the societal and economic
transformations affecting their lives within a gender-segregated
society and examining the challenges and dilemmas facing young
Saudi men in the twenty-first century. From ideas and beliefs
about, identity, education, employment, marriage prospects and
gender segregation, as well as political participation and
exclusion, this study in turn invites us to reconsider the future
of Saudi Arabia as a globalized kingdom.
Although the position of Saudi women within society draws media
attention throughout the world, young Saudi men remain part of a
silent mass, their thoughts and views rarely heard outside of the
Kingdom. Based on primary research across Saudi Arabia with young
men from a diverse range of backgrounds, Mark C. Thompson allows
for this distinct group of voices to be heard, revealing their
opinions and attitudes towards the societal and economic
transformations affecting their lives within a gender-segregated
society and examining the challenges and dilemmas facing young
Saudi men in the twenty-first century. From ideas and beliefs
about, identity, education, employment, marriage prospects and
gender segregation, as well as political participation and
exclusion, this study in turn invites us to reconsider the future
of Saudi Arabia as a globalized kingdom.
The GCC is a major player in the post-2011 reordering of the Middle
East. Despite the rise in prominence of individual Gulf states -
especially Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates
- and the growth of the GCC as a collective entity, surprisingly
little attention has been paid to the actual mechanics of
policy-making in the region. This book analyses the vital role that
institutions are coming to play in shaping policy in the Gulf Arab
states. The research coincides with two key developments that have
given institutions new importance in the policy process: the
emergence of a new generation of leaders in the Gulf, and the era
of low oil prices. Both developments, along with dramatic
demographic change, have compelled state and citizens to
re-evaluate the nature of the social contract that binds them
together. Contributors assess the changing relationship between
state and citizen and evaluate the role that formal and informal
institutions play in mediating such change and informing policy.The
book shows how academic, social and economic institutions are
responding to the increasingly complex process of decision-making,
where citizens demand better services and further empowerment, and
states are obliged to seek wider counsel, although wanting to
retain ultimate authority. With contributions from both academics
and practitioners, this book will be highly relevant for
researchers and policymakers alike.
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