Abu Dhabi: Oil and Beyond/ Christopher M. Davidson
Material type:
- 9781850659785
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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SAF Reference Library | Social Sciences | HC94-1085 210.051 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 4866 |
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HC10-1085 223.105 A History of Gold and Money: 1450-1920/ | HC94-1085 52.624 The United Arab Emirates- An Economic and Social Survey/ | HC94-1085 121.568 The Economic Development of the United Arab Emirates- Volume 13/ | HC94-1085 210.051 Abu Dhabi: Oil and Beyond/ | HC94-1085 210.052 Global Emirates: An Anthology of Tolerance and Enterprise/ | HC94-1085 210.053 500 سؤال عن الإمارات (الجزء الثاني)/ | HC94-1085 210.054 تاريخ عملات الامارات/ |
A rising economic power, Abu Dhabi, the capital city of the United Arab Emirates, is poised to become a major player in the fortunes of both Third and First World countries. Abu Dhabi owns more than 8 percent of the world's oil reserves, has close to one trillion dollars to invest in sovereign wealth funds, and is about to implement a masterful set of economic initiatives that will yield even greater returns.Abu Dhabi has begun to eclipse its partner city, Dubai, in terms of sheer wealth and cultural and infrastructural development, opening the world's first Ferrari theme park and erecting satellite branches of the Guggenheim and the Louvre. Author of the best-selling " The Vulnerability of Success" and an expert on Gulf politics, Christopher M. Davidson tracks Abu Dhabi's remarkable growth from a modest, eighteenth-century sheikhdom to its present opulent state. He recounts the dramatic efforts made by the emirate's dynastic family to retain their power, detailing the system of "tribal capitalism" they created in order to reconcile old political allegiances with modern engines of growth. Davidson concludes with potential challenges to Abu Dhabi's political and economic success, including a weakening of civil society, invasive media censorship, an ongoing labor crisis, increasing federal unrest, and persistent underperformance in the education sector.
English
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