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Edward P. Djerejian Center for the Middle East | Political Economy of the Arab Gulf | Journal

Kuwait as a Mediator in Regional Affairs: The Gulf Crises of 2014 and 2017

October 22, 2021 | Kristian Coates Ulrichsen
Map of Middle East centered on Kuwait

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Headshot of Kristian Coates Ulrichsen

Kristian Coates Ulrichsen

Fellow for the Middle East | Codirector, Middle East Energy Roundtable

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    Olivia Glombitza and Kristian Coates Ulrichsen. “Between the Domestic and the International: Ideational Factors, Peacebuilding and Foreign Policy in the Middle East and the Persian Gulf” (Houston: Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, October 22, 2021), https://doi.org/10.1080/03932729. 2021.1982293.

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Abstract

Kuwait has developed and earned a reputation as a mediator in regional affairs as leadership-level conceptions of ‘national’ and ‘regime’ security have intersected with pragmatic assessments of the benefits any such mediation would bring to Kuwait’s regional interests. As a small state in a volatile neighbourhood, such calculations have been accorded greater policymaking priority than any ideational attachment to mediation. Kuwait’s experience is nevertheless worthy of closer study for the lessons that can be drawn for other small states, especially those in the Gulf, which share broadly similar attributes to Kuwait in style of decision-making and the careful balancing of competing regional pressures.

Read the full article in the International Spectator (subscription required).

https://doi.org/10.1080/03932729.2021.1982293
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