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5 - Constructing Belonging and Contesting Economic Space

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2025

Crystal A. Ennis
Affiliation:
Leiden University
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Summary

This chapter explores inclusions and exclusions embedded within the Omani economy as experienced by citizens and foreigners. The chapter shows, first, that contestations around labour market belonging and experiences emerge within the local structures of segmentation and the global nature of Oman’s labour market. Second, in order to understand economic belonging and citizenship in the Gulf, class has to take a central role. The production of difference and competing identities of local regionalism, tribal and community affiliation, religion, interior and coastal cultures, race, heritage, and gender all matter but need to be understood alongside the intervening variable of class. The subjectivity of experiences and perceptions of inclusion and exclusion exposes how the politics and practice of difference in global capitalism produces tensions, value, and forms of power that manifest in labour and class relations. These dynamics also generate resistance and contestation around the boundaries of inclusion and exclusion.

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Chapter
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Millennial Dreams in Oil Economies
Job Seeking and the Global Political Economy of Labour in Oman
, pp. 203 - 241
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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