What is it about?
This article asserts that since Saudi Arabia's independence in 1932, the royal family has succeeded in forming Wahhabi nationalism, meaning that despite the fact that all Saudi civilians enjoy Saudi citizenship, only those who ascribe to the Wahhabism creed can be part of the nation in terms of political participation and policy decision‐making. Although some steps in affirmative action have been taken in recent years — also as a Saudi response to the Arab Spring — toward women and the Shi'a minority, these groups or sectors still are not perceived by the royal family as part of the nation, and probably not as equal citizens, for religious reasons that over the years have distinguished between real Saudi nationalist groups and Saudi civilians.
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Why is it important?
Nation State, nationality and nationalism are different terms that people use often without understand its original meaning. This paper, focusing in Saudi Arabia explore this issue
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This page is a summary of: Saudi Arabia's Wahhabism and Nationalism: The Evolution of Wataniyya into Qawmiyya, Digest of Middle East Studies, April 2018, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/dome.12131.
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