Expatriate Entrepreneurship in the Gulf Region between Informality and a Globalized Knowledge Society Cover Image
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Expatriate Entrepreneurship in the Gulf Region between Informality and a Globalized Knowledge Society
Expatriate Entrepreneurship in the Gulf Region between Informality and a Globalized Knowledge Society

Author(s): Joachim Kolb
Subject(s): Social Sciences
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: demographics; migrant entrepreneurship; free economic zones; Middle East; Gulf; IT entrepreneurs; incubators; informal entrepreneurs; migration; regulation; governance; political economy

Summary/Abstract: With some of the largest migrant populations worldwide as a percentage of the total population, the resource-rich states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) have an extended historical record of migrant entrepreneurship, the emergence of which predates that of the modern state. While the process of globalization is often conceived of as a unidirectional route to greater internationalization, the Gulf experience illustrates how the horizons of traditional migrant entrepreneurship may shrink as a result of the very development an earlier generation of migrants had made possible. Subsistence economies, where migrant entrepreneurs wielded considerable bargaining power, have now been transformed into institutionally more formalized sites of global consumption, where the social capital instrumental in earlier periods of expatriate entrepreneurship is increasingly mismatched with official entrepreneurial policies aimed at the reproduction of Silicon Valley-style modes of high-tech entrepreneurship, and the empowerment of Gulf nationals. pp. 89–107

  • Issue Year: 8/2015
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 89-107
  • Page Count: 19
  • Language: English