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Immigration Without Inclusion: Non-nationals in Nation-building in the Gulf States

Posted on Friday 27th January 2012

Philippe Fargues

The article Immigration Without Inclusion: Non-nationals in Nation-Building in the Gulf States” by Philippe Fargues has recently been published in a special issue on Migration in the Gulf States of the Asian and Pacific Migration Journal   20 (3-4):273-292.

Philippe Fargues is the Director of the Migration Policy Centre  at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies.

 

Abstract of the article

Migrants represent between one-third and four-fifths of the population in the Gulf States. Despite their sizable numbers, migrants can only have  temporary residency, they have no access to citizenship, and they have limited membership in society, conditions which are unique to the Gulf States as destination countries.

The first section argues that non-nationals have been instrumental in shaping the social link between nationals, and the relationship between them and their rulers.

The second section shows how oil-generated wealth has allowed demographic growth through high fertility among nationals, and high immigration among non-nationals through high immigration.

The faster growth among non-nationals has produced societies with a continuously shrinking proportion of nationals. Indeed, while policies of not allowing immigrants’ integration in the citizenry have worked well, policies aiming at reducing dependency on foreign workers through indigenizing the workforce and those limiting their duration of stay have not been successful. The exceptional demography of the Gulf States is not explained by an exceptional level of immigration as much as by an exceptional closure of local societies.