Anastasia Nosova

Portrait photo of Anastasia Nosova

PhD Candidate in Government

Email:  a.i.nosova@lse.ac.uknastya5337@gmail.com

Website: LSE Government Profile; Middle East Centre Profile

Curriculum vitae: Download CV

 

Research Interests

  • GCC states
  • Kuwait
  • Middle East politics
  • political economy
  • state-business relations
  • contentious politics

Job Market Paper

Benefitting When Possible, Resisting When Necessary: Private Sector and Economic Diversification Policies in Kuwait

Publications

A. Nosova. 2015. ‘Kuwaiti Arab Spring? The role of transnational factors in Kuwait’s contentious politics’, in Contentious Politics in the Middle East, edited by Fawaz Gerges. Palgrave Macmillan.

A. Nosova. February 2016. Al-Jaber princes jostle for power in turbulent times for Kuwait’s ruling family. Gulf States Newsletter 1,010.

A. Nosova. March 2016. Kuwait’s private sector and austerity measures in light of falling oil prices. LSE Middle East Centre Blog.

A. Nosova. April 2016. It’s crunch time for reform measures as Kuwaiti oil workers strike. Gulf States Newsletter 1,013.

A. Nosova. May 2016. Budget pressure, opposition weigh heavy on Kuwait’s new subsidies law. Gulf States Newsletter 1,014.

A. Nosova. July 2016. Election law amendment represents fresh blow to Kuwaiti opposition groups. Gulf States Newsletter 1,020.

A. Nosova. (upcoming). ‘Benefitting when possible, resisting when necessary: Private sector and economic diversification policies in Kuwait’, in Economic Diversification: Private Sector Role in Diversifying Gulf Economies, edited by Ashraf Mishrif and Yousuf Al-Balushi.

A. Nosova. (upcoming, 2016). The Voice and Loyalty of Business in Kuwait: Merchant Politics in Times of Contention. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies.

Teaching Record

Worked as an Associate Research Fellow in ESRC-funded research project ‘Re-Negotiating the Social Contract in the GCC: State-Business Relations and Reforms in the Oil-Rentier Gulf Monarchies’, University of Exeter, 2014-2016.

Supervisors

 

Dr John Chalcraft  (supervisor)
Associate Professor in the History and Politics of Empire/Imperialism
Department of Government, London School of Economics and Political Science

 

Dr Steffen Hertog (supervisor)
Associate Professor in Comparative Politics
Department of Government, London School of Economics and Political Science

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