Title of article :
Rethinking the Conflict-Proneness of Oil-Rentier States in Historical Context
Author/Authors :
Kürsad Özekin, Muhammed University of Sussex , Arıöz, Zeynep International Relations Department - Balıkesir University
Abstract :
With the rise of intra-state conflicts in the Middle East, particularly in the last two
decades, the causality relationship between oil wealth and political stability has
become a matter of debate in the literature. However, despite the proliferating
research interest, the impact of oil revenues on regime stability and civil conflicts still
remains contested in both theoretical and empirical terms. Bearing this limitation in
mind, this article aims to present a fairly general but analytically broadened
framework to explain the relationship between the decline of the oil-rentier states, and
the rise of intra-state conflicts experienced in the Middle East in the past two decades.
Putting matter into the historical context of the state formation and the colonial legacy
in the Middle East this study presents a slightly different reading of the causality
relation between oil revenue and the conflict-proneness of rentier states. Thus this
article, to a certain extent, moves beyond the conventional explanations of the rentier
state theory and argues that oil revenue cannot be taken as an explanatory variable
of conflicts per se.
Keywords :
Oil-Rentier State , State Formation , Colonial Legacy , the Middle East
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics