Publication

2011

Throughout the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), states face the peculiar dilemma of supporting full freedom of mobility for citizens while also severely limiting and curtailing the mobility of the dominant, non-national population. This paper questions how normative debates on the freedom of movement apply to the Gulf region and examines the policy and practice of strictly managing the movement of international migrants while at the same time freeing up movement for citizenry. It proposes that in the GCC, the regional political economy and the processes of regionalization and globalization have combined to tighten controls over mobility and migration.

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Author Zahra R Babar
Series CIRS Occasional Papers
Issue 8
Publisher Center for International and Regional Studies (CIRS)
Copyright © 2011 Center for International and Regional Studies (CIRS)
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