Skip to main content
Theme
English
Time
20:00
Location

Academiegebouw
Broerstraat 5
Groningen
Netherlands

Tickets
Admission free

Saudi Arabia in the International Spotlights

Paul Aarts

Saudi Arabia is in the international spotlights for its alleged support to Islamic State and other jihadi groups in Syria and its bad human-rights record.
The  Saudi royal family has survived the events of the Arab Spring intact and unscathed. Any upheavals were ostensibly averted with the help of oil revenues, while the Kingdom’s influential clergy conveniently declared all forms of protest to be against Islam. Does this mean that all is well, knowing that problems such as youth unemployment, corruption and repression are evident? While young Saudis may not yet be taking to the streets, on Twitter and Facebook their discontent is manifest. 
In the meantime, the country is in the international spotlights for its alleged support to Islamic State and other jihadi groups in Syria, its brutal military campaign in Yemen, and last but not least its bad human-rights record. How to understand its domestic and foreign policies? How to deal with Saudi Arabia? Is there an alternative to ‘business as usual’?

Paul Aarts was senior lecturer in international relations at the University of Amsterdam. His research focuses on the politics of the Arab world, with a specific focus on the Gulf countries. Among his recent publications: Saudi Arabia. A Kingdom in Peril (Saoedi-Arabië. De revolutie die nog moet komen, with Carolien Roelants), Hurst 2015. 

See also

Placeholder
Cees Fasseur
lezing en gesprek
Nederlands

In de jaren vijftig van de vorige eeuw wist Greet Hofmans, een soort Jomanda avant la lettre, het Koninklijk Huis in twee kampen te splijten: Prins Bernhard en zijn dochters aan

Aletta Jacobs Lecture 2010
Lisa Appignanesi
Women and the Mind Doctors
English

Ever since the birth of the mind-doctoring professions in the first part of the 19th century, women have not only been patients, but served as