Está en la página 1de 2

EBSCOhost

11/04/10 12:28 PM

Record: 1
The world of the Arabs. Economist, 7/25/2009, Vol. 392 Issue 8641, special section p4-4, 2/3p; Abstract: The article examines the demographics of the Arab countries. The 22 countries which compose the Arab League stretch from North Africa through the Middle East are extremely diverse both geographically and ethnically, and even linguistically, as Arabic dialects vary widely. Attempts to create unifying international organizations of these countries have mostly failed.; ( AN 43371347) Database: Business Source Premier Section: A special report on the Arab world

The world of the Arabs


What do they have in common? CONVENIENT as it is to describe the 22 countries (including the unborn Palestine) that belong to the Arab League as "the Arab world", the neat phrase can mislead. This is a heterogeneous agglomeration of some 350m people--Maronites, Copts, Berbers, Kurds and Africans as well as Arabs and Muslims-inhabiting a miscellany of lands from the Atlantic to the Persian Gulf and from the Saharan desert to the foothills of Anatolia. So all generalisations about the Arabs--their experiences, instincts and styles of faith or politics--should be treated with scepticism. Being "an Arab" is as slippery a notion as being "a European". These are loose identities, put on and taken off according to taste and circumstance. Many a black Christian African living in the south of Sudan, a country that happens to be a member of the Arab League, would be astonished to be told he was an Arab. So, despite being Muslim, would an Iraqi Kurd (though a Lebanese or Palestinian Christian would not be). If they are not an ethnic or a religious group, nor are the Arabs a language group. Arabic is widely spoken in the Arab world, but so for that matter is French. And Arab dialects differ so much that a Syrian will struggle to understand the Arabic of a Moroccan. Since most of the borders of the Arab world owe more to the dispositions of European colonialists than to authentic national groupings, some Arabs may think of themselves as Arabs first and Jordanians or Libyans second. For an Egyptian it would probably be the other way round. Islam is the dominant religion of the Arab world, but most of the world's Muslims are not Arabs. And although Islam gives Arabs a strong sense of fellowship, it can be a dividing force too. In some circumstances Sunnis and Shias still fight religious wars against each other, as they recently did in Iraq. Also in stark contrast to Europe, the Arab world has seen little formal integration. The United Arab Republic (UAR), which Egypt and Syria formed in 1958, lasted only three years. Other regional acronyms have come and sometimes acrimoniously gone. Thanks to Saddam's invasion of Kuwait, the ACC (the Arab Co-operation Council of Egypt, Iraq, Jordan and North Yemen) survived only a year after its birth in 1989. The Arab Maghreb Union has been a flop. The Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), consisting of Saudi Arabia and its five Gulf satellites, has fared better. But this and other projects have been held back by rivalries. As for the Arab League, it does little more than organise bad-tempered summits, fend off Western criticism of human-rights abuses by its members and denounce Israel. Al-Jazeera, the Arab world's most popular television channel, does an infinitely better job of providing the disparate Arabs with a sense of unity. So whom are you calling an Arab? Which of the following is your most important identity? Citizen of your country 35% Arab 32 Muslim 32 Citizen of the world 1 Source: Annual Arab Public Opinion Survey 2009, University of Maryland with Zogby International. Countries surveyed: Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates
http://web.ebscohost.com.ezproxy2.library.usyd.edu.au/ehost/delihid=105&sid=b4c9d3de-1175-44bf-b302-ce1f98f4a3f9%40sessionmgr111 Page 1 of 2

EBSCOhost

11/04/10 12:28 PM

The Arab world, 2009 Population, m EGYPT SUDAN ALGERIA MOROCCO IRAQ SAUDI ARABIA YEMEN SYRIA TUNISIA SOMALIA* LIBYA JORDAN UNITED ARAB EMIRATES PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES LEBANON KUWAIT MAURITANIA BAHRAIN OMAN QATAR DJIBOUTI COMOROS *2006 2008 Sources: IMF estimates; Economist Intelligence Unit MAP: The Arab world, 2009 GRAPH: So whom are you calling an Arab? 76.5 39.1 35.3 31.9 31.2 25.5 23.9 20.4 10.4 8.5 6.3 5.9 4.9 3.9 3.8 3.5 3.1 2.8 2.8 1.2 0.8 0.7 GDP, $bn 188 52 129 85 69 370 29 53 40 na 63 22 215 6 31 106 3 43 43 100 1 0.5 GDP per person $'000 2.5 1.3 3.6 2.7 2.2 14.7 1.2 2.6 3.8 na 9.9 3.6 43.9 1.7 8.1 30.0 1.0 15.0 15.0 81.9 1.4 0.8

Copyright of The Economist 2009 is the property of Economist Newspaper Limited and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. All rights reserved. Users may not save or store any or all of the content on their own systems or distribute any of the content on a local area or wide area network (such as corporate intranets or networks).

http://web.ebscohost.com.ezproxy2.library.usyd.edu.au/ehost/delihid=105&sid=b4c9d3de-1175-44bf-b302-ce1f98f4a3f9%40sessionmgr111

Page 2 of 2

También podría gustarte