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The Comparative Political Economy of the MENA Region

Principal Investigator: Dr Steffen Hertog
Duration:January 2015–July 2017

Kuwait-Elections-800-600
Kuwait Stock Exchange, Jack Dabaghian, Kuwait Ministry of Information / flickr.com (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

The MENA region has in the past served as inspiration for political economy theories that have proven significant for the developing world at large, notably modernisation theory and theories of rentier states and the 'resource curse'. Western strategic interest in the Middle East remains as high as ever thanks to its energy riches and the global implications of its regional conflicts. The political economy challenges the MENA region faces have, if anything, become more acute in the wake of the Arab uprisings.

Yet, in recent decades, there has been limited comparative political economy (CPE) research on the region and no major political science theories have emerged from it. While political scientists, development specialists and economists have done considerable work on Middle Eastern data and country cases, much of it is ideographic in focus. Comparative work is typically limited to intra-regional comparisons and tends to draw on general theories rather than contributing to them.

This project acted as a facilitator to re-energise comparative political economy research on the MENA region. While tackling some of the large political economy issues that are MENA-specific, its primary aim was to put the region into wider comparative context in the developing world. It not only tested the applicability of wider political economy concepts in MENA, but also drew on regional cases to generate theoretical innovation in comparative political economy.


Workshops

As part of the project, three workshops were organised bringing together leading academics from around the world.

Research Team

  • SteffenHertog

    Steffen Hertog | Principal Investigator

    Steffen is Associate Professor in the Department of Government at LSE.


  • Ferdinand-Eibl

    Ferdinand Eibl | Research Officer

    For the duration of the project, Ferdinand was Research Officer at the LSE Middle East Centre.