Arab Migrant Communities in the GCC

Arab Migrant Communities in the GCC
Description
For decades, while the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states have housed and employed groups of migrants coming and going from Asia, Africa and the West, they have also served as home to the older, more settled communities that have come from neighbouring Arab states.Arab Migrant Communities in the GCC is a unique, original work of scholarship based on in-depth fieldwork shedding light on a topic both highly relevant and woefully understudied. It focuses on the earlier community of Arab immigrants within the GCC, who are among the politically most significant and sensitive of migrant groups in the region. Through its multi-disciplinary lenses of social history, cultural studies, economics, and political science, the book presents original data and provides analyses of the settlement and continued evolution of migrant Arab communities across the GCC, their work in and assimilation within host societies and labour markets, and their political, economic, social and cultural significance both to the GCC region and to their countries of origin.. Long a recipient of migrants from its surrounding areas, the Arabian Peninsula today comprises a mosaic of communities of diverse ethnic, cultural, linguistic and r
Babar's recent publications include "The Cost of Belonging: Citizenship Construction in the State of Qatar" (Middle East Journal, 2014), as well as Food Security in the Middle East (co-edited with Suzi Mirgani), and Migrant Labor in the Persian Gulf (co-edited with Mehran Kamrava).. Previously, she served with the International Labor Organization and the United Nations Development Program. Her current research interests include
It will be a necessary reference for all researchers, instructors and students of international migration." -- Ibrahim Awad, Professor, Director of the Center of Migration and Refugee Studies (CMRS), The American University in Cairo (AUC)"This is a fascinating and overdue book. "This book is a reminder that Arab labour movements were at the origin of migration to the Gulf. Long overdue, this volume draws our attention to the complex sets of socio-political and cultural forces that give shape to migrant choices and fears." -- Jane Bristol-Rhys, Associate Professor of Anthropology at Zayed University Abu Dhabi, and author of Future Perfect / Present Tense: Migrant Workers, Expats, and Sponsors in Abu Dhabi. It offers compelling arguments for expanding the research agenda to include the dynami