Presentation at the London School of Economics

lakatos-building-for-webHi all,

I’ve just returned from a trip to the London School of Economics and Political Science, where I was invited to present to a workshop entitled Tribe and State in the Middle East, hosted by the LSE’s Middle East Centre. It was a fascinating conference, substantively interdisciplinary, and bursting with contributions and assessments from around the Middle East and North Africa.

The central question guiding this small congregation of scholars concerned how tribe and tribalism — undeniably a social feature integral to the traditions of many peoples around the Middle East — fits with the modern state. Are tribes and states antithetical in nature? Or can (and do) they fit together in new, unforeseen ways?

Papers helped illuminate this issue. Haian Dukhan‘s fascinating paper, for example, explored how tribalism features in the social frictions and conflict that have embroiled Syria. Alice Wilson‘s paper examined how tribal forms of meeting have been a feature of the nascent democracy in Western Sahara, and the basis for political mobilization in some parts of Oman. Alnoud Alsharekh clarified that tribalism was, and remains, a stoutly patriarchal form, and one that remains an oppressive force in women’s lives around Arabia. Numerous other papers in the session explored equally interesting topics.

In my own paper (which I retitled On Tribalism in Arabia), I provided an overview of anthropology’s long concern with the tribal form of social organization. While anthropology’s perspective on tribalism has evolved fairly dramatically over the last century, it remains a meaningful social form to many anthropologists, foremost, I think, because it remains a meaningful social form to the peoples we study. I further suggested that while researchers have pointed to the resurgence of tribalism in places where the state is weak or absent (such as post-war Iraq), the resurgence of tribalism in Qatar and the other Arabian Gulf States — places where the state is neither weak nor absent — suggests other conditions and circumstances also foster the value of this tribal form.

The Middle East Centre at the LSE intends to publish these papers on its blog, and I’ll post a brief follow up here with those links once they’re available.

Andrew

Andrew’s Presentation at Berkeley

Hi all,

IMG_0755

The ORIAS Migration and Diaspora group

ORIAS, or the Office of Resources for International and Area Studies, is a unit at the University of California Berkeley. ORIAS exists at the juncture of six different areas studies programs at Berkeley, including the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, the Center for Southeast Asia Studies, the Institute of East Asian Studies, and several more. Part of ORIAS’ mission is to help k-12 and community college teachers improve their understanding of global issues, and to incorporate those new understandings into their courses. This commitment takes the form of ORIAS Summer Institutes for Teachers.

The first ORIAS workshop of the summer was themed Migration & Diaspora, and I was asked by ORIAS to deliver a lecture about contemporary labor migration in the Middle East. My presentation, entitled Journey to Arabia, was an extrapolation of a paper I recently published, and provides an overview of the migration system that connects transnational labor migrants from around the Indian Ocean world to employment in the wealth states of the Arabian Peninsula. That presentation provided me and a really impressive group of community college professors with an excellent foundation for a wide-ranging conversation about the similarities and differences between migration here in America and elsewhere. We also

IMG_2448

Pre-presentation jitters …

discussed some of the challenges inherent in discussing other migrations and mobilities in the current American climate.
In addition to that stimulating conversation, I was also able to catch a couple other fascinating papers, including Edward Alpers‘ fascinating survey of The Indian Ocean Slave Trade from Africa, and Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky‘s Muslim Refugee Migrations from Russia to the Middle East. Altogether, I learned a lot from these other papers, and from the conversation we had following my presentation.

 

Andrew