AlShehabi, O.H. (2026) Labour importism: its rise and reproduction in the Arab Gulf States. Third World Quarterly. -1. ISSN: 0143-6597
Abstract
This article explores labour importism (LI) as a process of labour provisioning whose organising principle is the importation of temporary migrant workers. The analysis is developed around the Arab Gulf States (AGS), the most notable cases of LI in the post-war era. To begin, LI is fleshed out through a ‘history of the present’ genealogy that excavates archival material of the British colonial bureaucracy, the first to systematically administer LI in the AGS. Its lineages are traced from the fin de siècle until the 1970s, the pivotal decade in which LI expanded at scale and was institutionally embedded across all the AGS, continuing to shape migration policy until today. The article then analyses the contemporary social reproduction of LI using the lenses of social difference, global labour arbitrage based on unequal exchange, and super exploitation. As an empirically derived, analytically versatile and spatio-temporally dynamic conceptualisation, LI can overcome the shortcomings associated with state, market, or capital accumulation-centric approaches to labour migration in the AGS and beyond.
Metadata
| Item Type: | Article |
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| Authors/Creators: |
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| Copyright, Publisher and Additional Information: | © 2026 The Author(s). This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
| Keywords: | migration, Arab Gulf States, labour importism, social provisioning |
| Dates: |
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| Institution: | The University of Leeds |
| Academic Units: | The University of Leeds > Faculty of Education, Social Sciences and Law (Leeds) > School of Politics & International Studies (POLIS) (Leeds) |
| Date Deposited: | 14 Apr 2026 11:34 |
| Last Modified: | 14 Apr 2026 11:34 |
| Status: | Published online |
| Publisher: | Taylor & Francis |
| Identification Number: | 10.1080/01436597.2026.2639443 |
| Sustainable Development Goals: | |
| Open Archives Initiative ID (OAI ID): | oai:eprints.whiterose.ac.uk:239932 |
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