Fr. 156.00

Charity in Saudi Arabia - Civil Society Under Authoritarianism

English · Hardback

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Description

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"This is a book about Saudi Arabian civil society. This might sound like an oxymoron. Saudi Arabia is widely considered an authoritarian Islamic state with little space for any civil initiative to maneuver in or to flourish. Indeed, the Saudi Arabian state monitors and controls the life of its citizens with a rigid iron fist and does not allow for autonomous civil society organizations with any democratic undertones. Yet, this book presents a different perspective from which to view and understand Saudi Arabian society, not from a top-down vantage point - of how the state plans and controls complex social and political situations - but bottom-up, from the point of view of "on the ground" civil society initiatives, such as charities and other volunteering groups, and the ways they act and react in face of diverse social events, initiate and follow in face of governmental power and politics. With a focus on the social and what is occurring in society, my research leads me to suggest a more nuanced picture of state-society relations and the agency of ordinary Saudis and non-Saudis in the kingdom. I began pondering these issues following my experience with the aid campaign after the Jeddah floods in 2009. It was this experience that led me to seek different analytical and conceptual tools for understanding Saudi Arabian society than the ones currently in use in academic research of this unique country, where royal power, Wahhabi religious scholarship and enormous oil wealth set an opaque facade that covers a complex and vibrant social life"--

List of contents










1. Introduction: Civil society theory, charity, and inequality in Saudi Arabia; 2. Meanings of welfare: The First Women's Welfare Association in Jeddah; 3. Managing poverty and national development: The Society of Majid bin ¿Abd al-¿Aziz for Development and Social Services; 4. Negotiating citizenship and belonging: The Young Initiative Group; 5. Fun, freedom, and personal growth amid rising repression: The Hikers; 6. Conclusion: Civil society activism and everyday Islam in Saudi Arabia.

About the author

Nora Derbal is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She holds a DPhil in Islamic Studies from Freie Universität Berlin, and has studied Islamic Studies and Modern History in Oxford, Berlin, and Jeddah. This is her first book.

Summary

Focused on charity activism, this innovative book offers rich insights into charity organizations and everyday charity practices in Jeddah, and the lives of those who care for the poor and needy to deepen our understanding of state-society relations, as well as practices of everyday Islam in Saudi Arabia.

Foreword

An innovative study of charity practices in Saudi Arabia, focusing on ordinary Saudis who provide charity to the poor and needy.

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