Migration and Popular Protest in the Arabian Peninsula and the Gulf in the 1950s and 1960s

The conventional historiography on popular and labor protest in the Arabian peninsula and the Gulf since the Second World War tends to ascribe a negative role to migration. Migrants—dragooned into the service of expanding oil economies—are often depicted as undermining the cohesion and efficacy of i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational labor and working class history Vol. 79; no. 1; pp. 28 - 47
Main Author Chalcraft, John
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, USA Cambridge University Press 01.04.2011
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Summary:The conventional historiography on popular and labor protest in the Arabian peninsula and the Gulf since the Second World War tends to ascribe a negative role to migration. Migrants—dragooned into the service of expanding oil economies—are often depicted as undermining the cohesion and efficacy of indigenous labor activism and popular protest. This article adopts a different perspective. It revisits the most important twentieth-century wave of pan-Arab, secular, republican, and socialist protest in the region—that of the 1950s and 1960s—and highlights the positive contribution migrants made. They were not just quotients of labor power, but interpretive and political subjects. Palestinians, Yemenis, and others, along with return- and circular-migrants, exiles, and visitors, transmitted pan-Arab and Leftist ideas, helped build activist organizations, and participated in a variety of protests. I suggest that standard forms of endogenous socioeconomic determinism in the labor history of the region need rethinking.
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ISSN:0147-5479
1471-6445
DOI:10.1017/S014754791000030X