Relationship Conflict

Relationship Conflict

I have always felt the urge to walk away from every relationship that feels real due to a conflict that left me feeling broken and devastated. I once loved this boy who ended up breaking my heart and ended up dating my best friend in a bid to make me jealous while all I did was go for a camp with my cousins who he allegedly argued that were cover ups for my secret boyfriend.

This conflict stemmed out of the fact that we culturally have a family gathering once every month. My boyfriend felt that I went into the country too many times and maybe it was because I secretly saw each other. He supported his argument with the fact that I posted several pictures on social media sharing a traditional meal with one cousin in particular where we sit on stools and eat together. My boyfriend thought that this was a romantic meal which he further supported with other pictures where we were caught on camera playing with the hard of a sheep we had just finished slaughtering. Our customs allow us to slaughter together, wash hands, and eat together without using forks or spoons, just our bare hands.

Most people do not understand each other’s cultural norms, and they tend to misinterpret them or to look at them wrongly. If he had understood our customs, he could not have felt threatened and insecure. However, my boyfriend was ignorant of the fact that he did not even try to understand that this was my cousin and incest is culturally unacceptable. He merely thought I was lying to him about him being a part of our family. He held the notion that our culture was misguided and it presented people with a platform to be unfaithful. However, our culture believes in the values of family and aims to strengthen that bond. This is what most people fail to understand.

Cultural practices such as goat slaughtering, holding family gatherings, and sharing a meal, are what make our culture what it is. People come together in the big occasion and still meet up in small occasions. Our culture allows us to pray together and perform certain rituals such as cleansing of the family together. Therefore, this was the reason I was so much engraved in family activities from time to time that my boyfriend thought I was cheating.

This proved some theoretical arguments about feminism whereby people find it acceptable when a man does something and unacceptable when it is a woman. My boyfriend did not think my alleged boyfriend was in the wrong because he felt that meant were justified to go for what they loved. He even once blamed me for asking him whether he was seeing another girl whom he argued was a family member. In my situation, he was totally convinced that I was in the wrong, regardless of the situation.

Feminist theories aim at understanding the nature of gender inequality which was clearly shown when my boyfriend ultimately chose to date my best friend after breaking up with me. If I had reacted in the same way, I could have been painted as a slut or a cheap person while when he did it, he just gained more fame and popularity. This serves to show how the community is still misguided on the aspect of equality.

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How do different personalities affect the conflict resolution process?

Conflict Resolution and Personality Types

Introduction

Conflict is an unavoidable part of the human experience because humans interact daily with people with different ideas and points of view.  The dynamic nature of life dictates that human beings are continuously being pulled into environments that have parallel traits and beliefs. The alterations are the primary cause of conflict, and because human beings are inherently social, conflict cannot be avoided in any scenario (Abdullah, 2016). Conflict indicates that the learning process is taking place because different points of view are being passed along. Thus, conflict is good for the development of any society, especially if society has a particular aim it is trying to reach. On the other hand, conflict can be destructive because it impedes development since folks have to drop everything and solve the dispute before the development process can go on. The resolution process is important because it dictates when the group of people will get back to normal and continue the development process.

Conflict always present motives backed by personal interests and wants. Thus, personality plays a vital role in forming conflict, and eventually, the conflict resolution process. To solve conflicts, it is imperative that one knows the other party’s personality, so that it can be resolved amicably. A person’s Nature has a direct effect on the way a person answers the conflict with some people facing the problem head on, and some avoiding the problem altogether.  The Big Five Personality Types are often used to identify personality types, and they are used to determine the conflict resolution type to be used for particular scenarios and individuals.

Personality can be defined as a person’s behaviour about their, thought process, and attitude (Ayachit, 2014). Ideally, the character is developed when someone is young, and it is hard to change someone’s personality when they are older. The best thing one can do is to learn how to live with people of all personalities. Differences in personalities, thinking style, are factors that can easily because conflict is a group of people.  Reason being, the thought process of different people is not the same, and that is enough grounds for conflict to occur. Social interactions lead to relationships, and for relationships to work, different ideas must be involved. These different ideas are the cause of conflict, and if the people involved have personalities that influence poor behaviour, then the dispute will not be resolved. An unresolved conflict would lead to bad blood between the members, especially if some of them had personalities that influenced good behaviour.

Research Question

  • How do different personalities affect the conflict resolution process?

Literature Review

A study by Fui (2015) aimed to find out the effect personality had on team conflict. The study found out that there is a relationship between character and conflict in a team. Notably, neurotic people were found to give a positive connection with task conflict, while other types of nature had a positive relationship, but it was not significant. In any team, there will be conflict, because it is different people with different ideas working together. Thus, the conflict resolution style should consider the personalities, so that they can be resolved amicably.

People learn how to manage conflicts from their parents, or guardians. They observe the way their seniors solve the conflict and emulate them as they grow older and become independent (Virga et al., 2014).  Therefore, some people end up with good conflict management styles, while some people end up with poor conflict management styles. The value people place on different things dictates how they deal with conflict. The value one places on an object are different from the value another will place on the same object. Thus, in part, a person’s conflict resolution style is dependent on what they see their parents put a value on, and how they solve issues. 

Personality has a significant influence on the way people resolve conflicts. Some folks are confrontational- they face their problems head-on and in the open. On the other hand, some people avoid problems and do not feel comfortable confronting other people (Ayub, 2017). Such people bottle up emotions, and once in a while, the feelings become too much, and they have significant breakdowns.  At the workplace, sentiment can be both good and bad. It is good when it is constrained within the tolerable limits. Conflict ensures productivity and healthy competition. It becomes dysfunctional when the acceptable limits are passed, and people cannot deal with the dispute amicably.  A conflict that has not been solved can result in stress, anxiety and poor, satisfactory rates in any team. Ideally, some personalities develop relationships, while some destroy relationships.

Kenneth Thomas and Ralph Kilmann formulated five methods of dealing with conflict. The primary argument in their model was that people often have one way of conflict resolution, and it is often related to a personality. The Thomas- Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument has five styles that are defined as competitive, cooperative, accommodating, collaborative and avoiding (Ayachit, 2014).  Competitive conflict resolution style is for people who are very assertive and are very knowledgeable in what they want. They are selfish too, because they go after what they want, without a care in the world for other people. They are vocal about their needs, and often, they operate from a place of power. This conflict resolution style is best when a decision has to be made on short notice, and there is no time for deliberation. However, it is not good for the team dynamic in the long run, because it bruises egos, has reduced satisfactory rates and cannot work when in a situation where there are many competitive people. Secondly, there is avoiding resolution style whereby folks stay away from conflict entirely. Such people are not firm in their decisions and rarely cooperate. Such a person is wary not to hurt other people’s feelings, and it is best when someone else is in a better position to solve the problem. It is also the best conflict resolution style when there is no best way to solve the problem at hand. People who solve problems using this style will postpone addressing the issue until it is too late. This conflict resolution style is not the best, because it does not solve problems. It is a weak approach that has the potential to lead to more conflicts when not handled early. The collaborative approach is whereby a person aims to meet the needs of everyone.

As such, such people are firm in their decision-making process. Unlike a competitor, other people’s point of views are acknowledged and listened to, and their positions are taken into consideration. It is the best conflict resolution style when different ideas are needed, or the decision affects a whole group. Often, creative solutions are arrived at, because of the contribution of many people. Accommodating style of conflict resolution is similar to collaborative but that the level of assertiveness is lower. In this style, the needs of others are met first, and the person can trade of their needs without a second thought to accommodate other people.  This style is the best when an issue affects the other person more than it affects the accommodator. However, this style is often referred to as weak, because it requires a high level of reciprocity, and some people might not return the favour. That leaves room for more conflict and resentment to arise. The compromising conflict resolution style is whereby folks aim to find an answer that will favour every person, or at least partially. Often, people walk away from a decision-making process unsatisfied, but at least everyone acquired something from the resolution.  This method is best when the conflict is vital to everyone, and no one is willing to lose. It often comes in handy when people of equal strengths meet, and the option of losing ground is not a possibility. It means that everyone has to sacrifice some of their needs, to accommodate other people. It is the best conflict resolution style for big organizations when making decisions that affect most of the workers.

David Antonioni (1998) looked into the effects of personality and conflict resolution styles. Ideally, Conscientious, agreeable and open people take care of disagreements in a positive way. People with the personality mentioned above style rarely used avoidance as a way to solve conflicts, but find ways to confront the problem head-on.  People can either respond assertively, aggressively of passively to conflict (Ayachit, 2014).  Assertive people often aim to make permanent solutions, and it promotes open dialogue and discussion for both parties who are faced with the clash. Aggressive people often bully others to submission. It works for the short term when an important decision has to be made, and there is no time for deliberation. However, aggressive people build resentment from other people, because of the low levels of satisfaction. Passive people are submissive because they avoid conflict whenever they can. Thus, the possibility of the conflict escalating to levels where it is controversial is typical for such people. Often, people who respond to conflict this way talk to their peers about their dissatisfaction, in a bid to influence the decision-making process. However, they might never face the source of the conflict directly to address the issue.

Hypothesis

  • Different personality types influence the conflict resolution process differently.

The Rationale of the Study

The study aims to find out how different personality types affect the conflict resolution process. Thus, it will help team leaders and management teams are aware of how to solve conflict within their organizations. Other studies have looked into personality types, and conflict resolution strategies, but have not combined the two, yet they go hand in hand. Therefore, there is a research gap in finding out the way different personalities opt to solve a conflict, and why they choose the conflict resolution process, they opt for. This study will provide findings that will indicate how the different personality types solve disputes, and if the situation changes when they are in different scenarios. 

Methodology

Study Design

The study will assume a quantitative model.

Participants

The study participants will be accrued from a local service company because occupations in the service industry require a lot of human interaction. The sample size will be 50 participants, and they will be chosen at random. Thus, age, gender, and the race will all be left to chance. The participants must be over eighteen years and have worked at the company for more than six months.

Materials

For this study, both primary and secondary data will be used. Researchers will collect primary data, while secondary data will be accrued from online databases and print media.

Tools for Data Collection

  1. The Thomas and Kilmann (1974) instrument will be used. It has five conflict-handling styles. Moreover, it has 30 styles and two selections. Partakers will be required to indicate a choice that represents their behaviour.
  2. Questionnaires: the questionnaire will have questions to test the conflict resolutions the people will use in different situations. A liker scale will be used to identify how strongly one agrees with a particular conflict resolution strategy.

Procedure

The participants will be contacted at the beginning of the study, and those that meet the inclusion criteria will be given informed consent to sign. Research assistants will then collect data from the study participants, by giving them questionnaires to fill. Quantitative data will be collected from online databases and print media. For online databases, a correlational analysis will be done on the articles found so that only those that have data on personality types and conflict resolution are used. If the findings prove the hypothesis right, then it will determine that personality types affect conflict resolution in organizations.

Anticipated Results

Quantitative data were analyzed using numerous statistical methods.  Frequency distribution was used to analyze the data. Regression analysis and correlation analysis was also used to analyze the data. The tool that will be used to perform the study is SPSS version 15.

Extroversion would score highly with a correlation of about -270 and lowly with accommodating with a correlation of -429. Openness would correlate -290 with collaborating but score lowly with avoiding, at -170. This goes on to prove the hypothesis that personality type does affect the conflict resolution type of people.

Extraverted people will score highly in the collaborating style of conflict resolution, and score lowly n accommodating and compromising style of conflict resolution style. People who are open will score lowly ion avoidance, and score highly in the collaborative style. Moreover, agreeable folks will score lowly on competition style and highly in accommodating style. Conscientious people will score highly in the collaborative form and lowly in avoiding and compromising. Lastly, neurotic individuals will score lowly in collaborative and compromise but score highly in accommodative style.

Discussion

The findings indicate that personality is directly related to conflict resolution strategies, to suggest that in any setting the characters have to be acknowledged, for conflict to be solved amicably.

Strengths and Limitations of the Research

The study chose a sample size from an industry that involves a lot of human interaction, to mean that the results are valid. On the other hand, the sample size was too small, and might not be representative of the whole population.

Directions for Future Research

Future research should examine if personalities are static or people modify them to fit the situation. This would shed light on the theory that people often have more than one character.

References

Abdullah, N. A. (2016). Understanding the association between personality and conflict management style of counselors in Selangor. International Journal of Business and Social Science, 137-145.

Ayachit, D. (2014). Exploring the relationship between personality and conflict resolution style of future managers. Journal of General Management Research, 65-76.

Ayub, N. (2017). Personality traits and conflict management styles in predicting job performance and conflict. International Journal of Conflict Management, 671-94.

Fui, L. D. (2015). The relationship between personality and team conflict. International Journal of Accounting and Business Management , 39-49.

Virga et al. (2014). Personality, relationship conflict, and teamwork-related mental models. PLOS ONE, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110223.

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THE NATURE OF THE CONFLICT BETWEEN SAUDI ARABIA GOVERNMENT AND THE OPPOSITION UNDER INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL SUPPORTERS

CHAPTER ONE

Introduction

Saudi Arabia is one of the most religious states in the world which has successfully combined the state (dawla), religion (din), and princes (umara) (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001). The country has thrived on the arrangement between the royals and the religious clerics. The Al-Saud royal family provides funding and a stable structure of government which allowed the growth of a conservative religion throughout the nation, while the clerics provided the government with the religious legitimacy to rule (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001) . The arrangement made it possible to have an authoritarian regime that uses the nation’s wealth to the favour of only the royal family. Clerics legalize all action made by the authoritarian regime even though unjustified. Arbitrary detentions and enforced disappearance were legalized by clerics as the Royals’ right to protect citizens which completely contradict with Islamic teaching. Detaining thousands of people for more than six months, in some cases for over a decade, without referring them to courts for criminal proceedings (Justice 2008) . Arbitrary detainees held for very long periods has obviously increased dramatically in recent years. Cleric Salman AlOudah has been detained since 1st September 2017 without a legal charge or indictment and was not brought to the court. It was not only the Islamists who were exposed to such violations but the intellectuals and human rights activists. The clerics were free to enforce Sharia in the country, and the Royals were free to run the wealth and affairs of the country. However, as the Saudi state grew and started embracing modernism, some changes were made, and this revealed subordination of clergy to the Royals at the expense of religion. The Royals welcomed some western ways, and this foreign influence should be rejected by the clerics (Kostiner 1996) . The royal family now is fully controlling the clerics. Conflicts arose as a result of this modernization of the country in that; the clerics support the reforms implemented by the state. Accordingly, official religious establishment became part of the government and worked in line with. The royal family wanted a more centralized system of government while citizens keen to huge reform away from the authoritarian regime.

Security grip is a royal way to keep interests and stay in power. It is impossible to talk about pluralism nor political participation as that can be conceded as disobedience of the royals and Islam teaching.  In the meantime, all opposition forces are calling for democracy, pluralism and political participation. Citizens are also seeking change not calling for dropping the royals but by calling for constitutional monarchy. Citizens and opposition forces believe in the political reform which obviously unacceptable to the Royals. Therefore, citizens’ perceptions are important for more understanding the needed reform. 

Saudi Arabia government approved a huge shift when prince Mohammed Bin Salman appointed as crown prince on June 21, 2017 (Barnell 2017). The new crown prince has made a number of exciting reforms, such allowing women to drive, opening cinema halls and performing concerts. Unfortunately, political reforms were not part of the crown prince’s plan. Furthermore, the crown prince has embarrassed the Wahhabi religious establishment as all his reforms contradict their approach. 

Crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman stated that Saudi authority adopted Wahhabism as requested by western states to stop the Communist expansion in the late 1970s (DeYoung 2018). The statement can be considered as a coup against the religious establishment which has been silent. Opposition forces welcomed the statement as it removes the authority religious legitimacy that violates rights and confiscates freedoms.  

CHAPTER TWO

Literature

The opposition in Saudi Arabia can be traced back to the early 1930s. Prior to this period, the Islamic rules were practised in accordance with the Wahhabi creed. These principles laid the basis of the Saudi expansion as an enforcer of the sharia law. The laws were used as a moral compass to guide the actions of the citizens. After the establishment of a state that was more centralized than decentralized, individuals and groups resisted the control from the state. A dispute later arose between Abd al- ‘Aziz Ibn ‘Abd al-Rahman (Ibn Sa’ud), the Saudi leader at that time, and a number of tribal groups, the Ikhwan, who were loyal to the religion and resisted being under the control of the government. Fierce disagreements arose between the leading clerics and the royals. In the 1930s, the king, Ibn Sa’ud made the Wahhabi Islam the official state religion. Only the senior clerics had supreme religious authority. This meant that all the other clerics could only conduct their affairs within the religious framework put in place by the king. He also made state interest superior to the religious interests (Matthiesen 2015) .

The Wahhabi Islam became the only moral guide in the state. However, they were only allowed to operate in accordance with the interests of the state. The clerics were limited to guiding the behaviour of the public, educating individuals, and preaching. They could not take part in governing the state. The state was run by the royals and the elite clerics. The Ikhwan tribal groups which opposed the king’s control over the people lost the battle in between 1929 and 1930 after a military help from Great Britain to King Abdulaziz. They were not able to spread their ideologies. They remained underground, and their ideas were adopted by various other opposition movements over time. The opposition in Saudi Arabia came to be as a result of people resisting change and state control (Meijer, Aarts, Wagemakers, & Kanie 2012) .

After the Second Gulf War, the opposition continued to grow. The opposition groups and individuals in this era had slightly different grievances. When the Saudi military was unable to defend the country, and the U.S military troops were called in to help, most of the people criticized the state. The royal family was seen as weak and incompetent leaders. The opposition groups that developed in this period were determined to end the reign of the royal family. There was a public outcry when the non-Muslim troops came into the country. The presence of the foreign troops in the state led to the opinion that the royal family held foreign interests in high esteem. The opposition criticized the royals as being keener on protecting the interests of outsiders (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001) .

In the years 1991-2001, the activities of the opposition were restricted by the state. Outspoken individuals who challenged the royals were imprisoned or detained without a trial (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001). The opposition groups such as the Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia started operating outside Saudi Arabia to avoid being persecuted. Most of the opposition leaders used London as a base of operations. They were able to reach their supporters through the internet and the media without facing any repression from the royal family.  The grievances and issues addressed were the same throughout the 1990s. Both the radicals and the liberals agreed on the issue of foreign interference (Jenkinsc 2017) .

Their oppositions have grown ever since despite the constant repression from the Saudi government. The opposition in Saudi Arabia is similar to other movements in the Middle East except for the fact that the Saudi opposition derives from the Wahhabi school of thought in that, they have their interpretation of the Sharia that they use to challenge state control as being unlawful. Some of the religious ideologies of the modern opposition and activism correspond with some of the ideas from the West, and as a result, they can influence the modern middle-class individuals (Matthiesen 2015) explain the assertion – democracy- pluralism- human rights principles. The Saudi oppositions accept and call for democracy, political participation, and pluralism that denied by Wahhabism. It is easier for them to influence the educated people since they purport to seek to address a modern issue such as corruption, human rights violations, among other things. Even though some of the oppositions have clear objective sand structures, they are at risk or becoming ineffective due to the measures were taken by the Saudi government and other interested parties in repressing opposition. This means that even though most of these oppositions exist and have a lot of influence, their activities are quashed even before they become established. 

The Theory of Saudi Arabia Political Opposition

All political oppositions fighting the authoritarian regime and call for democracy but under Islamic rules (sharia law).  It is common for the opposition parties in Saudi Arabia to uses the language of Islamic laws, to accuse the government of breaching the holy law by neglecting Islamic goals and deviating from Islamic practices in the administrative, economic and political affairs. The opposition party also suggests alternatives to the existing government based on the Islamic Sharia laws. The radical Islamic opposition movement such as the Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) questions theexisting state order by giving its own interpretation of Wahhabi Islam.

Liberalism enjoys a global victory in some sense, and it is perceived to perpetuate the ideals of political liberties or free trade to maximize individual freedom best. However, the opposition in Saudi Arabia believes in liberalism but under Islamic rules (not pure liberalism). The opposition in the country does not advocate a strictly secular state. The opposition is against a West’s spiritually vacant secular culture but instead want a liberal democracy’s based on divine authority. While the opposition supports most of the liberal democracies including popular elections and economic modernization, God’s sovereignty is central to the opposition politicians. The political opposition tends to align their politics with a righteous society with the precepts of shari’a; spiritualism rationalized in the technocratic ways they use to rise against the government and its absolute authority.
While the Political oppositions call for Pluralism as they believe in the need for political parties and institutions of civil society, but they support the activities of the groups should be based on their interpretation of the Islamic law.  Interpretation of the Islamic law differs from one group to another, but that does not change the nature of the liberalism they want to see in the country.

The Islamic Umma Party.

          The Islamic Umma Party is regarded as the first opposition political party in Saudi Arabia. It had defied the order that forbade the existence of political parties in Saudi Arabia. The party came into being after nine Saudi scholars, and political activists came together to fight for political reforms. The party was made public on February 9th, 2011. Unlike other organizations that came before and after it, it had a very organized structure with leaders and a well spelled out (Alsalem 2011) .

            After the party was formed, the officials of the party made invitations to activists who shared the same opinions to join them. As a result of this announcement, the founding members of the party were arrested and detained on 16th February that same year. The detainees included; Dr Ahmed bin Sa’ad bin Gharm al-Ghamidi who was a professor at Umm al-Qura University, Mr Sa’ud bin Ahmed al-Dughaithir a political activist, Shaykh Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad al-Wuhaybi; a lawyer and political activist; Dr Abdul Kareem bin Yusuf al-Khidhr who was a university professor, Shaykh Muhammad bin Hussein bin Ghaanim al-Qahtani, a businessman; Mr Muhammad bin Naser al-Ghamidi, a political activist, and Dr. Waleed bin Muhammad Abdullah al-Majid, a lawyer. The detention of these individuals was fueled by the fact that the party had amassed a big following using the media. Its growing influenced threatened the government which is keen on restricting opposition. The actions of the state succeeded in disabling the activities of the party for a while. However, by this time, the Islamic Umma Party had managed to capture the attention of a lot of the people in Saudi Arabia and outside the country. The party’s influence of the people made it a strong opposition organization in the country (Alsalem 2011). It was not just merely existing but also making a difference in terms of political opinions.      

Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA

        Robert Ryan writes an account of the MIRA opposition from its inception to the year 2005. This opposition movement was started in the early 1990s by Sa‘ad al-Faqih. Faqih was one of the founding members of another radical group, the Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights (CDLR). When CDLR relocated to London in 1993, he formed MIRA as an opposition movement against the regime in Saudi Arabia. The opposition movement claimed to be running in accordance with the sharia laws. After September 11, 2001, Faqih attracted the attention of the media and publicly condemned the Al-Saud family for various reasons including their exercise of power in Saudi Arabia. He claimed only to support peaceful means of resolving conflict (Ryan 2005).

The movement has a strong horizontal but weak vertical structure. It is a single person organization since it was formed by Faqih alone. This makes it very weak and is bound to disappear once its leader is disappeared — the movement aimed at removing the Al-Saud family from power using peaceful means. Faqih was an expatriate and this limited the ways through which the Saudi government would capture and imprison him. The movement was also based in London and utilized technology to reach its supporters. Ryan argues that Faqih and the movement were not as effective as they were unable to inspire any kind of reform. In 2004, Faqih called for demonstrations, but the turnout was low since public protesting is outlawed in Saudi Arabia. On the day of the protests, the government increased security troops on the streets to prevent the assembly of people and direct traffic. The other reason why there were very few people willing to take part in the demonstrations was that they did not know what they were protesting against. When Faqih called for the protests, he only told his followers to demand reforms. The movement was linked to terrorist groups. In 2004, Faqih was put on the list of al-Qaeda operatives by the United Nations Security Council (Ryan 2005) .

Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party).

          The Tajdeed Islamic Party was formed in London. Its focus is on the jurisprudence issues that affect Muslim. It supports the “freedom of thought and believes in dialogue based on argument and evidence” (About the Ideology of Party of Islamic Renewal). This is a radical Islamist group that believes in fulfilling their duties at any cost. The growth of the influence of the group is curtailed by both the Saudi government and the Western world.

Ghanem Almasarir

Ghanem Almasarir is a Saudi human rights activist and a well-liked political comedian who is based in London. He is a known political satirist popular for hosting the Ghanem Show that features many popular sections such as “Fadfada.” The show involves criticism of the royal family using black comedy. As an individual opposition, he is very effective in reaching the people. He has a very good media presence and has over half a million followers on tweeter and more on the other social media platforms. The work he does not only sensitizes the world on what is happening in Saudi Arabia but also provides an alternative to the use of violence and threats in the fight against an oppressive regime. The show and the other video clips he publishes on websites and on YouTube reaches thousands of people. His YouTube channel and tweets are readily available to the public. The fact that he can reach a lot of people makes Ghanem one of the most effective opposition. The use of social media improves his chances of reaching the young generation.

Almasarir had been in self-imposed exile since 2003 in London, where he controlled his YouTube-based show from 2015. In his show, he condemns the Saudi royal family, whom he tags as “Salmanco” (relating to the techniques used by the King in controlling the nation in a fashion comparable to a business or as private possession) and “al-Dub al-Dasher” (means fat stray bear) correspondingly in a funny way. Almasarir accused Saud al-Qahtani, an advisor to the Saudi royal court, of being involved in crimes linked to “visa fraud” in Saudi Arabia.

Oppositions Financial Support

The Royals have not lacked the oppositions, although for a long time the Royals have been capable of containing or coopting them. After the second Gulf War, nevertheless, the socio-religious troubles that have overwhelmed the country have resulted in the development of a small opposition society that has disputed royals’ public image. The oppositions were funded later on by international countries such as Libya, Qatar, and Iran.

It has been recognized and noted that Saudi oppositions receive some financial support from states such as the former Libyan regime, Qatar, and Iran. The late Gaddafi’s regime in Libya offered financial aid to Mohammed Almassari, Saudi’s opposition leader, to assassinate former king Abdullah (Burger & Macleod 2004). Qaddafi termed the Saudis that they can even ally with the devil to save themselves. King Abdullah referred to Gaddafi as a liar and states that his grave awaits him. That was in 2003. In 2009, the two leaders insulted each other again in an Arab League summit. Gaddafi had confirmed supporting the assassination attacks on the Saudi King Abdullah. This was to happen in either of the following ways: a personal attack, or by oppositions that would overcome the Royals. Gaddafi planned to interfere and harm the royals and was looking for an opposition who were eager to get involved (Fotopoulos 2011). Al-Massari was the primary suspect of the plan who was charged for the proceedings on colluding for the murder of the late King Abdullah.

Qatar has supported the Saudi Saad Al-Faqih and others to utilize them as instruments to strike the royals. Qatar’s want to respond to the Saudi royals whom supported and planned the 1996 coup against Qatar regime. Qatar preferred to attain that objective by destabilizing UAE, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, by supporting their arch-rival, Iran that is also planning on disrupting order in the Middle East (Almezaini & Rickli 2016).

Al-Faqih and others were paid millions of Qatari Riyals to create and spread falsehoods concerning Saudi royals. Al-Faqih, currently living in London received 395 million Qatari riyals to use in the plan, in any manner, on weaving fictions on Saudi royals (Qatarileaks 2017) . Qatar has established then use Aljazeera channel to sponsor socio-political reforms in the region. Aljazeera channel helped Saudi oppositions to spread their ideas and political projects to stepdown the Saudi royals for a limited period of time. 

Iran had funded Al-Dosari since 2015 when he started his Ghanem show with Iran offering Almasarir free TV studio recording. Ghanem show could freely use the Iran network as a Saudi human rights campaigner and a well-liked political comedian to criticize the Saudi government. This provided a great chance for the Protestants in Saudi to demonstrate and disrupt the government. Ghanem show and the black comedy also gives the opposition a chance to disclose mysteries linked to the royal family and incited demonstrations against the Saudi rule.

Through external funding from Iran and its London organizations arm, Almasarir had led an opposition group referred to as “September 15 Movement.” The protest occurred all over Saudi Arabia in 2017 that has been depicted as convincing a large group of citizens. The protests supported by Almasarir led to a point where the existing crisis with Qatar had authorized gathering so many people protesters like never before that might be the reason for the anxiety of the system towards the demonstrations. London has functioned as an Arab media house. Running away from the bans at home, media personalities find liberty in exile. United Kingdome provided the safest place for Saudi Arabian oppositions. 

Famous clergymen like Salman al-Ouda and Awadh al-Qarni were captured because of being detected as “pro-Doha” and a big following in social media networks that the Saudi regime dreaded would be used to aid protests mandated by Almasarir (Mabon 2018). Frequent leading priests associated with the Saudi like Grand Mufti and Saleh Al Maghamsi have pointed out flaws in Almasarir’s campaign and demanded Saudi people to oppose it.

Al-Sheikh was hosted in MBC show and assured that the advocators for protests for the 15th September campaign were supporters of fraud and sedition “fitna.” He confirmed that they do not have a good intention and that they want to disrupt the government and cause unnecessary civil war, which is promulgated by the rivals of Saudi Arabia. He has accused Almasarir of working with Iran to incite and sponsor the “September 15 Movement”. He also termed demonstrators as the advocates of ignorance “Jahiliyyah” and perverseness. Since late 2017, it was recorded that Almasarir already had about 553,000 followers on Twitter and million viewers on his YouTube-based channel. 

Iran is funding and politicizing the Shia distinctiveness that is intended only to enhance tensions in Saudi Arabia and might even undermine other parts of the Middle East. Iran has long attempted to institute itself as a main, political, economic and cultural competitor in the Middle East by tactically funding the minority Shia in the area. As the leading Shia majority nation in the area, Iran has an interest in offsetting Saudi power through the area and conquering a place as a local power with worldwide accomplishment. As the Sunnis are ruled by functional governments, Iran fights to gain more influence in Iraq than all other interested parties do. Tehran would want to keep Iraq stable but would have to mediate between Shia and Sunni conflict, helping Shia regain its influence in the region but keeping them from being too powerful.

Massive Reforms in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia is known for the history of maintaining the legacy of Islamic conservatism to shape the country’s education and economy. However, with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ascend to power social liberalization has become central to the economic modernization, Islamic tolerance and moderation. For several years, Saudi Arabia has been an oil-dependent economy, and economic liberalization would have a significant economic impact in the country’s future.

According to Stancati (2018) , Saudi Arabia was the only country in the world that had banned women from driving, and it was considered a taboo for women to drive. Music and entertainment were also considered taboo in the country while women were also prohibited from watching soccer or getting involved in sports. However, Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s “Vision 2030” program is intended to transform the country economically, socially and culturally by lifting most of the practices that hold the country back. According to Kubersky (2018) , Saudi Arabia has pledged to use billions of dollars to modernize and overhaul the country’s entertainment sector in a bid to achieve the economic value of the sector. During an ultra-conservative past, the participation of women in public entertainment was unheard, and it was a taboo for women to enter entertainment venues. However, with reforms women are free to participate in all entertainment activities. 

Most of the new reforms are intended to make the Kingdom more progressive in line with moral standards of the West. According to Thompson (2017) , Saudi Arabia under Prince Mohammed bin Salman has entered an unprecedented phase in its history with much of Kingdom’s tight religious policies being eased to alleviate the oppression many Saudis have experienced in the history of the country. Much of the religious policies have been oppressive especially on the part of women since they could not drive or participate in sports or even any kind of entertainments, but with the new reforms, women can enjoy a normal life like other women elsewhere in the world.

Saudi Arabia’s oil industry has been central to most of the benefits that are enjoyed by its citizens including free health care and subsidized housing. However, with the declining global oil prices, Mohammed bin Salman perceives that privatizing certain sectors such as the national oil industry would help diversify the economy an end the Kingdom’s overreliance on oil-economy. According to Ignatius (2018), the new reform plan is intended to make Saudi Arabia into a more entrepreneurial, more modern, less-hidebound and more youth- ­oriented society. Majority of the country’s population is made up of youth, and more than 12% of the labour force is unemployed. Salameh (2016) contends that the new changes will help the country become more attractive to foreign investors and empower the country’s own youth in the facing of growing underground extremist groups and limited opportunities for the youth. The revenue from oil has been declining since the prices of the product plummeted in 2014. A drive to economic diversification will help the country overcome vulnerability that arises from the reliance on oil alone.

Reforms imposed by Prince Mohammed bin Salman prove essential to Saudi Arabia’s alignment with the global social and economic changes. Diversification of the economy is vital to help the country overcome economic challenges in the face of declining fortunes from the oil industry. Changes in the social and cultural welfare of the country are essential since alleviation of rigid religious policies gives women much-needed freedom they deserve.


Hypothesis

This research has developed the below hypothesis to act as a guide when conducting the research.

  • Hypothesis: The repression of political opposition by authoritarian Saudi monarchy is not centred on Islamic fundamentalism but the response to radical movements challenging the strength behind the authoritarianism including US imperialism and modernization.

Most of the political opposition parties in Saudi Arabia are concerned about the increased US imperialism and secularization of the society which is against the Islamic fundamentalism which is the source of the countries national pride. The hard stance taken by the monarch against political activities in the country is influenced by the desire to maintain the strengthening forces behind the authoritarian government which are the US imperialism and oil capitalism.

The US and other foreign forces have been a significant role in supporting the Saudi Arabia monarch to crush the slightest political opposition be it peaceful, conservative or radical.  In the aftermath of radicalization that led to the infamous 9/11 terrorist attack in America, the Western forces including the US and UK have supported the monarchy in a large to repress any political opposition using any means possible.  While the legitimacy of the authoritarian government is supported by the clerics, who have been the force behind the conservative religion that is the central to national unity, increased US imperialism has made the monarch to drift away from the Islamic Sharia laws that are fundamental Islamic religion.  The democratic space in the country has been repressed to impede the political opposition a chance to thrive in the country. In the aftermath of the Arab spring, the monarch employed harsh measures intended to crush the slightest form of opposition in the country.

Research Objectives

The primary aim of this research is to explore which factors affect the success of the Saudi Arabia opposition parties in light of authoritarian monarch government that uses all forms of powers to outlaw political opposition in the country.  The study will explore how a wide range of factors empower or disempowers the political opposition in the country.

Objectives

  1. To determine how the political opposition thrive in the face of authoritarian government.
  2. To establish western influence in Saudi Arabia affects the success of the opposition political parties.
  3. Determine whether international financial supports the success of political opposition in Saudi Arabia.
  4. To determine how lack of democracy hinders political opposition activities in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Establish how monarch has learned how best to deal with opposition groups since the Arab Spring.

Research Questions

Research questions help in providing the direction that the research will take. This particular research will use the following research questions

  1. To what extent does lack of democracy affect political opposition, Saudi Arabia?
  2. How has the Arab Spring affected success or failure of political opposition in Saudi Arabia?
  3. How have Western countries affected political opposition in Saudi Arabia?
  4. Which is the main factor that affects the success of the Saudi Arabia political opposition?
  5. How is international financial support shaping the future of political opposition in Saudi Arabia?
  6. What are the achievements of political opposition parties in Saudi Arabia?

The following chapter presents the methodology of the main study in order to examine the research questions.

CHAPTER THREE

Methodology

The study employed a qualitative content analysis approach.  The study extracted data for specific variables of interest including a year of publication, type of publication and availability of the content. The study selected freely available information on the internet which included publications by major digital newspapers, print, websites and scholarly articles. The study employed a systematic coding approach to code a large volume of text to identify to identify patterns or themes and meanings from the texts. The coding approach was developed based on the conventional qualitative content analysis approach. A systematic generation of theory (The Theory of Saudi Arabia Political Opposition) was used to develop codes directly from the texts.  

The code names developed in the study included

  1. Attitude from the West
  2. Democracy
  3. Constitutional monarchy
  4. International financial support
  5. Political openness
  6. Historical hostility among opposition’s groups
  7. Saudi authority suppressing for each group since the Arab Spring

Analysis

While the Saudi Arabia monarchy regime prohibits formation of political opposition outfit in the Kingdom, a number of political parties including The Islamic Umma Party, Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA, Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) and Ghanem Almasarir have been formed in protest to a wide range of issues they do not agree with in the monarch. However, the political outfits have experienced a mix of failures and success in the light of the authoritarian government for a wide range of factors.

Suppression by Saudi Authority after the Arab Spring

The Arab Spring played a significant role in influencing regime change in large part of the Arab World including countries such as Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and Bahrain.Saudi Arabia remained untouched by the Arab Spring by employing successful counterrevolutionary mechanisms. However, the Arab Spring played a vital role in promoting the formation of political opposition in the Kingdom that had experienced limited political opposition activities for several decades (Mabon 2012). The Umma Islamic Party is one of the parties whose position was predominantly influenced by the Arab Spring in 2011. It is regarded as the first opposition political party in Saudi Arabia since it was the first to defy the order that forbade the existence of political parties in Saudi Arabia. Party came into being after nine Saudi scholars, and political activists came together to fight for political reforms. The party was made public on February 9th, 2011. Unlike other organizations that came before and after it, it had a very organized structure with leaders and a well spelled out (Alsalem 2011) . In light of the  Arab Spring that was informed by the need to bring an end to the Authoritarian Regimes in most of the Arab States, The Umma Islamic Party also wanted an end to the authoritarian Saudi monarch regime. The Arab Spring had succeeded in toppling oppressive regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Bahrain and it played a significant role to buttress formation of the first political movement in the Saudi Arabia soil. All the other political movements were operating outside Saudi Arabia including the Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA and Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) which are based in U.K.

Since early 2011 the monarch has taken stern action against Islamist and liberal critics without clear reasons behind the arrests and other measures taken by the government. Open criticism of prominent princes or the ruling family as a whole and overt challenges to the Wahhabi interpretation of Islam predominant in the country drew particularly harsh responses (Mabon 2012). The Islamic Umma Party (Hizb al-Umma al-Islami) which formed a political opposition in the state despite being banned by the monarch government experienced the wrath of the government (Bsheer 2018). The Saudi ruling family assumed that the Islamic Umma Party (Hizb al-Umma al-Islami) wanted to topple their regime despite the party having moderate demands. The founding members of the Islamic Umma Party were arrested but later released on the condition that they would refrain from any form of political activities in the future. Any activist or individual who made any form of provocative demands in the aftermath of the 2011 Arab Spring faced heightened state repression liberal activists such as Muhammad al-Qahtani and Abdallah al-Hamid.

Democracy and Constitutional Monarchy

The Saudi monarch government employs authoritarianism which comprises of a ban on political action, frequent resort to police violence, opacity, and disinformation. Use of excessive power to crack down dissidents through waves of arrests and imprisonments has impacted negatively on political opposition in Saudi Arabia (Matthiesen 2012). Additionally, there is the use of specialized Criminal Courts that use the counterterrorism regulations to repress pro-reform activists and peaceful dissidents. A sheer criticism of the regime through media interview or social media warrants arrest and imprisonment. Arbitrary arrest s of political party leaders and activists coupled with systematic violations of due process and fair trial rights have made it hard for the political opposition to thrive in the country (Ménoret 2016). The authorities detain arrested suspects for months, even years, without judicial review or prosecution with the sole intention of crapping down any form of political opposition. The intellectuals behind the formation of the Umma Party were arrested following the formation of the party. Other party leaders including those of the Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA and Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) had to operate from U.K in fear of being arrested and lack of democracy in Saudi Arabia. Ghanem Almasarir, one of the major activists and critics of the Saudi Royal family, operates from U.K. for fear of being arrested.

The Western Attitude

The Al Saud have consolidated their grip on power, against popular protest and unrest, with the aid of the U.S. oil company Aramco and of international security cooperation. In the past decades, the Saudi state has benefited from the French, British, and U.S. input in the design of a brutal repression machine. All the opposition parties in Saudi Arabia are against the Western Imperialism adopted by the royal family in governing the country.  The increased involvement of the Western Powers such as the U.S.A, U.K., France and Germany in the affairs of Kingdom has led to increased modernization which is interpreted as the secularization of the society and western imperialism by the opposition parties (Madawi 2015). In the aftermath of the terror attack on the American soil in 9/11, the American government supported the Saudi Arabia government in the fight against terrorism with the intention of suppressing any form of radicalization in the country. Consequently, the Suadi Arabia government adopted the 2014 terror laws extended the definition of terrorism to cover the peaceful protest, political speech, and organized action (Rosie 2012). The kingdom now has full power to crush any protest or criticism, no matter how peaceful or constructive it may be. Ultimately, the Saudi Arabia opposition today is organized principally on Islamist foundation which is the sense of national pride (Beranek 2009). However, the support of the western powers Saudi Arabia has been able to crush every form on the opposition in the country making opposition activities hard to thrive.

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THE NATURE OF THE CONFLICT BETWEEN SAUDI ARABIA GOVERNMENT AND THE OPPOSITION UNDER INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL SUPPORTERS

CHAPTER ONE

Introduction

Saudi Arabia is one of the most religious states in the world which has successfully combined the state (dawla), religion (din), and princes (umara) (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001). The country has thrived on the arrangement between the royals and the religious clerics. The Al-Saud royal family provides funding and a stable structure of government which allowed the growth of a conservative religion throughout the nation, while the clerics provided the government with the religious legitimacy to rule (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001) . The arrangement made it possible to have an authoritarian regime that uses the nation’s wealth to the favour of only the royal family. Clerics legalize all action made by the authoritarian regime even though unjustified. Arbitrary detentions and enforced disappearance were legalized by clerics as the Royals’ right to protect citizens which completely contradict with Islamic teaching. Detaining thousands of people for more than six months, in some cases for over a decade, without referring them to courts for criminal proceedings (Justice 2008) . Arbitrary detainees held for very long periods has obviously increased dramatically in recent years. Cleric Salman AlOudah has been detained since 1st September 2017 without a legal charge or indictment and was not brought to the court. It was not only the Islamists who were exposed to such violations but the intellectuals and human rights activists. The clerics were free to enforce Sharia in the country, and the Royals were free to run the wealth and affairs of the country. However, as the Saudi state grew and started embracing modernism, some changes were made, and this revealed subordination of clergy to the Royals at the expense of religion. The Royals welcomed some western ways, and this foreign influence should be rejected by the clerics (Kostiner 1996) . The royal family now is fully controlling the clerics. Conflicts arose as a result of this modernization of the country in that; the clerics support the reforms implemented by the state. Accordingly, official religious establishment became part of the government and worked in line with. The royal family wanted a more centralized system of government while citizens keen to huge reform away from the authoritarian regime.

Security grip is a royal way to keep interests and stay in power. It is impossible to talk about pluralism nor political participation as that can be conceded as disobedience of the royals and Islam teaching.  In the meantime, all opposition forces are calling for democracy, pluralism and political participation. Citizens are also seeking change not calling for dropping the royals but by calling for constitutional monarchy. Citizens and opposition forces believe in the political reform which obviously unacceptable to the Royals. Therefore, citizens’ perceptions are important for more understanding the needed reform. 

Saudi Arabia government approved a huge shift when prince Mohammed Bin Salman appointed as crown prince on June 21, 2017 (Barnell 2017). The new crown prince has made a number of exciting reforms, such allowing women to drive, opening cinema halls and performing concerts. Unfortunately, political reforms were not part of the crown prince’s plan. Furthermore, the crown prince has embarrassed the Wahhabi religious establishment as all his reforms contradict their approach. 

Crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman stated that Saudi authority adopted Wahhabism as requested by western states to stop the Communist expansion in the late 1970s (DeYoung 2018). The statement can be considered as a coup against the religious establishment which has been silent. Opposition forces welcomed the statement as it removes the authority religious legitimacy that violates rights and confiscates freedoms.  

CHAPTER TWO

Literature

The opposition in Saudi Arabia can be traced back to the early 1930s. Prior to this period, the Islamic rules were practised in accordance with the Wahhabi creed. These principles laid the basis of the Saudi expansion as an enforcer of the sharia law. The laws were used as a moral compass to guide the actions of the citizens. After the establishment of a state that was more centralized than decentralized, individuals and groups resisted the control from the state. A dispute later arose between Abd al- ‘Aziz Ibn ‘Abd al-Rahman (Ibn Sa’ud), the Saudi leader at that time, and a number of tribal groups, the Ikhwan, who were loyal to the religion and resisted being under the control of the government. Fierce disagreements arose between the leading clerics and the royals. In the 1930s, the king, Ibn Sa’ud made the Wahhabi Islam the official state religion. Only the senior clerics had supreme religious authority. This meant that all the other clerics could only conduct their affairs within the religious framework put in place by the king. He also made state interest superior to the religious interests (Matthiesen 2015) .

The Wahhabi Islam became the only moral guide in the state. However, they were only allowed to operate in accordance with the interests of the state. The clerics were limited to guiding the behaviour of the public, educating individuals, and preaching. They could not take part in governing the state. The state was run by the royals and the elite clerics. The Ikhwan tribal groups which opposed the king’s control over the people lost the battle in between 1929 and 1930 after a military help from Great Britain to King Abdulaziz. They were not able to spread their ideologies. They remained underground, and their ideas were adopted by various other opposition movements over time. The opposition in Saudi Arabia came to be as a result of people resisting change and state control (Meijer, Aarts, Wagemakers, & Kanie 2012) .

After the Second Gulf War, the opposition continued to grow. The opposition groups and individuals in this era had slightly different grievances. When the Saudi military was unable to defend the country, and the U.S military troops were called in to help, most of the people criticized the state. The royal family was seen as weak and incompetent leaders. The opposition groups that developed in this period were determined to end the reign of the royal family. There was a public outcry when the non-Muslim troops came into the country. The presence of the foreign troops in the state led to the opinion that the royal family held foreign interests in high esteem. The opposition criticized the royals as being keener on protecting the interests of outsiders (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001) .

In the years 1991-2001, the activities of the opposition were restricted by the state. Outspoken individuals who challenged the royals were imprisoned or detained without a trial (Teitelbaum & Pipes 2001). The opposition groups such as the Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia started operating outside Saudi Arabia to avoid being persecuted. Most of the opposition leaders used London as a base of operations. They were able to reach their supporters through the internet and the media without facing any repression from the royal family.  The grievances and issues addressed were the same throughout the 1990s. Both the radicals and the liberals agreed on the issue of foreign interference (Jenkinsc 2017) .

Their oppositions have grown ever since despite the constant repression from the Saudi government. The opposition in Saudi Arabia is similar to other movements in the Middle East except for the fact that the Saudi opposition derives from the Wahhabi school of thought in that, they have their interpretation of the Sharia that they use to challenge state control as being unlawful. Some of the religious ideologies of the modern opposition and activism correspond with some of the ideas from the West, and as a result, they can influence the modern middle-class individuals (Matthiesen 2015) explain the assertion – democracy- pluralism- human rights principles. The Saudi oppositions accept and call for democracy, political participation, and pluralism that denied by Wahhabism. It is easier for them to influence the educated people since they purport to seek to address a modern issue such as corruption, human rights violations, among other things. Even though some of the oppositions have clear objective sand structures, they are at risk or becoming ineffective due to the measures were taken by the Saudi government and other interested parties in repressing opposition. This means that even though most of these oppositions exist and have a lot of influence, their activities are quashed even before they become established. 

The Theory of Saudi Arabia Political Opposition

All political oppositions fighting the authoritarian regime and call for democracy but under Islamic rules (sharia law).  It is common for the opposition parties in Saudi Arabia to uses the language of Islamic laws, to accuse the government of breaching the holy law by neglecting Islamic goals and deviating from Islamic practices in the administrative, economic and political affairs. The opposition party also suggests alternatives to the existing government based on the Islamic Sharia laws. The radical Islamic opposition movement such as the Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) questions theexisting state order by giving its own interpretation of Wahhabi Islam.

Liberalism enjoys a global victory in some sense, and it is perceived to perpetuate the ideals of political liberties or free trade to maximize individual freedom best. However, the opposition in Saudi Arabia believes in liberalism but under Islamic rules (not pure liberalism). The opposition in the country does not advocate a strictly secular state. The opposition is against a West’s spiritually vacant secular culture but instead want a liberal democracy’s based on divine authority. While the opposition supports most of the liberal democracies including popular elections and economic modernization, God’s sovereignty is central to the opposition politicians. The political opposition tends to align their politics with a righteous society with the precepts of shari’a; spiritualism rationalized in the technocratic ways they use to rise against the government and its absolute authority.
While the Political oppositions call for Pluralism as they believe in the need for political parties and institutions of civil society, but they support the activities of the groups should be based on their interpretation of the Islamic law.  Interpretation of the Islamic law differs from one group to another, but that does not change the nature of the liberalism they want to see in the country.

The Islamic Umma Party.

          The Islamic Umma Party is regarded as the first opposition political party in Saudi Arabia. It had defied the order that forbade the existence of political parties in Saudi Arabia. The party came into being after nine Saudi scholars, and political activists came together to fight for political reforms. The party was made public on February 9th, 2011. Unlike other organizations that came before and after it, it had a very organized structure with leaders and a well spelled out (Alsalem 2011) .

            After the party was formed, the officials of the party made invitations to activists who shared the same opinions to join them. As a result of this announcement, the founding members of the party were arrested and detained on 16th February that same year. The detainees included; Dr Ahmed bin Sa’ad bin Gharm al-Ghamidi who was a professor at Umm al-Qura University, Mr Sa’ud bin Ahmed al-Dughaithir a political activist, Shaykh Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad al-Wuhaybi; a lawyer and political activist; Dr Abdul Kareem bin Yusuf al-Khidhr who was a university professor, Shaykh Muhammad bin Hussein bin Ghaanim al-Qahtani, a businessman; Mr Muhammad bin Naser al-Ghamidi, a political activist, and Dr. Waleed bin Muhammad Abdullah al-Majid, a lawyer. The detention of these individuals was fueled by the fact that the party had amassed a big following using the media. Its growing influenced threatened the government which is keen on restricting opposition. The actions of the state succeeded in disabling the activities of the party for a while. However, by this time, the Islamic Umma Party had managed to capture the attention of a lot of the people in Saudi Arabia and outside the country. The party’s influence of the people made it a strong opposition organization in the country (Alsalem 2011). It was not just merely existing but also making a difference in terms of political opinions.      

Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA

        Robert Ryan writes an account of the MIRA opposition from its inception to the year 2005. This opposition movement was started in the early 1990s by Sa‘ad al-Faqih. Faqih was one of the founding members of another radical group, the Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights (CDLR). When CDLR relocated to London in 1993, he formed MIRA as an opposition movement against the regime in Saudi Arabia. The opposition movement claimed to be running in accordance with the sharia laws. After September 11, 2001, Faqih attracted the attention of the media and publicly condemned the Al-Saud family for various reasons including their exercise of power in Saudi Arabia. He claimed only to support peaceful means of resolving conflict (Ryan 2005).

The movement has a strong horizontal but weak vertical structure. It is a single person organization since it was formed by Faqih alone. This makes it very weak and is bound to disappear once its leader is disappeared — the movement aimed at removing the Al-Saud family from power using peaceful means. Faqih was an expatriate and this limited the ways through which the Saudi government would capture and imprison him. The movement was also based in London and utilized technology to reach its supporters. Ryan argues that Faqih and the movement were not as effective as they were unable to inspire any kind of reform. In 2004, Faqih called for demonstrations, but the turnout was low since public protesting is outlawed in Saudi Arabia. On the day of the protests, the government increased security troops on the streets to prevent the assembly of people and direct traffic. The other reason why there were very few people willing to take part in the demonstrations was that they did not know what they were protesting against. When Faqih called for the protests, he only told his followers to demand reforms. The movement was linked to terrorist groups. In 2004, Faqih was put on the list of al-Qaeda operatives by the United Nations Security Council (Ryan 2005) .

Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party).

          The Tajdeed Islamic Party was formed in London. Its focus is on the jurisprudence issues that affect Muslim. It supports the “freedom of thought and believes in dialogue based on argument and evidence” (About the Ideology of Party of Islamic Renewal). This is a radical Islamist group that believes in fulfilling their duties at any cost. The growth of the influence of the group is curtailed by both the Saudi government and the Western world.

Ghanem Almasarir

Ghanem Almasarir is a Saudi human rights activist and a well-liked political comedian who is based in London. He is a known political satirist popular for hosting the Ghanem Show that features many popular sections such as “Fadfada.” The show involves criticism of the royal family using black comedy. As an individual opposition, he is very effective in reaching the people. He has a very good media presence and has over half a million followers on tweeter and more on the other social media platforms. The work he does not only sensitizes the world on what is happening in Saudi Arabia but also provides an alternative to the use of violence and threats in the fight against an oppressive regime. The show and the other video clips he publishes on websites and on YouTube reaches thousands of people. His YouTube channel and tweets are readily available to the public. The fact that he can reach a lot of people makes Ghanem one of the most effective opposition. The use of social media improves his chances of reaching the young generation.

Almasarir had been in self-imposed exile since 2003 in London, where he controlled his YouTube-based show from 2015. In his show, he condemns the Saudi royal family, whom he tags as “Salmanco” (relating to the techniques used by the King in controlling the nation in a fashion comparable to a business or as private possession) and “al-Dub al-Dasher” (means fat stray bear) correspondingly in a funny way. Almasarir accused Saud al-Qahtani, an advisor to the Saudi royal court, of being involved in crimes linked to “visa fraud” in Saudi Arabia.

Oppositions Financial Support

The Royals have not lacked the oppositions, although for a long time the Royals have been capable of containing or coopting them. After the second Gulf War, nevertheless, the socio-religious troubles that have overwhelmed the country have resulted in the development of a small opposition society that has disputed royals’ public image. The oppositions were funded later on by international countries such as Libya, Qatar, and Iran.

It has been recognized and noted that Saudi oppositions receive some financial support from states such as the former Libyan regime, Qatar, and Iran. The late Gaddafi’s regime in Libya offered financial aid to Mohammed Almassari, Saudi’s opposition leader, to assassinate former king Abdullah (Burger & Macleod 2004). Qaddafi termed the Saudis that they can even ally with the devil to save themselves. King Abdullah referred to Gaddafi as a liar and states that his grave awaits him. That was in 2003. In 2009, the two leaders insulted each other again in an Arab League summit. Gaddafi had confirmed supporting the assassination attacks on the Saudi King Abdullah. This was to happen in either of the following ways: a personal attack, or by oppositions that would overcome the Royals. Gaddafi planned to interfere and harm the royals and was looking for an opposition who were eager to get involved (Fotopoulos 2011). Al-Massari was the primary suspect of the plan who was charged for the proceedings on colluding for the murder of the late King Abdullah.

Qatar has supported the Saudi Saad Al-Faqih and others to utilize them as instruments to strike the royals. Qatar’s want to respond to the Saudi royals whom supported and planned the 1996 coup against Qatar regime. Qatar preferred to attain that objective by destabilizing UAE, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, by supporting their arch-rival, Iran that is also planning on disrupting order in the Middle East (Almezaini & Rickli 2016).

Al-Faqih and others were paid millions of Qatari Riyals to create and spread falsehoods concerning Saudi royals. Al-Faqih, currently living in London received 395 million Qatari riyals to use in the plan, in any manner, on weaving fictions on Saudi royals (Qatarileaks 2017) . Qatar has established then use Aljazeera channel to sponsor socio-political reforms in the region. Aljazeera channel helped Saudi oppositions to spread their ideas and political projects to stepdown the Saudi royals for a limited period of time. 

Iran had funded Al-Dosari since 2015 when he started his Ghanem show with Iran offering Almasarir free TV studio recording. Ghanem show could freely use the Iran network as a Saudi human rights campaigner and a well-liked political comedian to criticize the Saudi government. This provided a great chance for the Protestants in Saudi to demonstrate and disrupt the government. Ghanem show and the black comedy also gives the opposition a chance to disclose mysteries linked to the royal family and incited demonstrations against the Saudi rule.

Through external funding from Iran and its London organizations arm, Almasarir had led an opposition group referred to as “September 15 Movement.” The protest occurred all over Saudi Arabia in 2017 that has been depicted as convincing a large group of citizens. The protests supported by Almasarir led to a point where the existing crisis with Qatar had authorized gathering so many people protesters like never before that might be the reason for the anxiety of the system towards the demonstrations. London has functioned as an Arab media house. Running away from the bans at home, media personalities find liberty in exile. United Kingdome provided the safest place for Saudi Arabian oppositions. 

Famous clergymen like Salman al-Ouda and Awadh al-Qarni were captured because of being detected as “pro-Doha” and a big following in social media networks that the Saudi regime dreaded would be used to aid protests mandated by Almasarir (Mabon 2018). Frequent leading priests associated with the Saudi like Grand Mufti and Saleh Al Maghamsi have pointed out flaws in Almasarir’s campaign and demanded Saudi people to oppose it.

Al-Sheikh was hosted in MBC show and assured that the advocators for protests for the 15th September campaign were supporters of fraud and sedition “fitna.” He confirmed that they do not have a good intention and that they want to disrupt the government and cause unnecessary civil war, which is promulgated by the rivals of Saudi Arabia. He has accused Almasarir of working with Iran to incite and sponsor the “September 15 Movement”. He also termed demonstrators as the advocates of ignorance “Jahiliyyah” and perverseness. Since late 2017, it was recorded that Almasarir already had about 553,000 followers on Twitter and million viewers on his YouTube-based channel. 

Iran is funding and politicizing the Shia distinctiveness that is intended only to enhance tensions in Saudi Arabia and might even undermine other parts of the Middle East. Iran has long attempted to institute itself as a main, political, economic and cultural competitor in the Middle East by tactically funding the minority Shia in the area. As the leading Shia majority nation in the area, Iran has an interest in offsetting Saudi power through the area and conquering a place as a local power with worldwide accomplishment. As the Sunnis are ruled by functional governments, Iran fights to gain more influence in Iraq than all other interested parties do. Tehran would want to keep Iraq stable but would have to mediate between Shia and Sunni conflict, helping Shia regain its influence in the region but keeping them from being too powerful.

Massive Reforms in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia is known for the history of maintaining the legacy of Islamic conservatism to shape the country’s education and economy. However, with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ascend to power social liberalization has become central to the economic modernization, Islamic tolerance and moderation. For several years, Saudi Arabia has been an oil-dependent economy, and economic liberalization would have a significant economic impact in the country’s future.

According to Stancati (2018) , Saudi Arabia was the only country in the world that had banned women from driving, and it was considered a taboo for women to drive. Music and entertainment were also considered taboo in the country while women were also prohibited from watching soccer or getting involved in sports. However, Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s “Vision 2030” program is intended to transform the country economically, socially and culturally by lifting most of the practices that hold the country back. According to Kubersky (2018) , Saudi Arabia has pledged to use billions of dollars to modernize and overhaul the country’s entertainment sector in a bid to achieve the economic value of the sector. During an ultra-conservative past, the participation of women in public entertainment was unheard, and it was a taboo for women to enter entertainment venues. However, with reforms women are free to participate in all entertainment activities. 

Most of the new reforms are intended to make the Kingdom more progressive in line with moral standards of the West. According to Thompson (2017) , Saudi Arabia under Prince Mohammed bin Salman has entered an unprecedented phase in its history with much of Kingdom’s tight religious policies being eased to alleviate the oppression many Saudis have experienced in the history of the country. Much of the religious policies have been oppressive especially on the part of women since they could not drive or participate in sports or even any kind of entertainments, but with the new reforms, women can enjoy a normal life like other women elsewhere in the world.

Saudi Arabia’s oil industry has been central to most of the benefits that are enjoyed by its citizens including free health care and subsidized housing. However, with the declining global oil prices, Mohammed bin Salman perceives that privatizing certain sectors such as the national oil industry would help diversify the economy an end the Kingdom’s overreliance on oil-economy. According to Ignatius (2018), the new reform plan is intended to make Saudi Arabia into a more entrepreneurial, more modern, less-hidebound and more youth- ­oriented society. Majority of the country’s population is made up of youth, and more than 12% of the labour force is unemployed. Salameh (2016) contends that the new changes will help the country become more attractive to foreign investors and empower the country’s own youth in the facing of growing underground extremist groups and limited opportunities for the youth. The revenue from oil has been declining since the prices of the product plummeted in 2014. A drive to economic diversification will help the country overcome vulnerability that arises from the reliance on oil alone.

Reforms imposed by Prince Mohammed bin Salman prove essential to Saudi Arabia’s alignment with the global social and economic changes. Diversification of the economy is vital to help the country overcome economic challenges in the face of declining fortunes from the oil industry. Changes in the social and cultural welfare of the country are essential since alleviation of rigid religious policies gives women much-needed freedom they deserve.


Hypothesis

This research has developed the below hypothesis to act as a guide when conducting the research.

  • Hypothesis: The repression of political opposition by authoritarian Saudi monarchy is not centred on Islamic fundamentalism but the response to radical movements challenging the strength behind the authoritarianism including US imperialism and modernization.

Most of the political opposition parties in Saudi Arabia are concerned about the increased US imperialism and secularization of the society which is against the Islamic fundamentalism which is the source of the countries national pride. The hard stance taken by the monarch against political activities in the country is influenced by the desire to maintain the strengthening forces behind the authoritarian government which are the US imperialism and oil capitalism.

The US and other foreign forces have been a significant role in supporting the Saudi Arabia monarch to crush the slightest political opposition be it peaceful, conservative or radical.  In the aftermath of radicalization that led to the infamous 9/11 terrorist attack in America, the Western forces including the US and UK have supported the monarchy in a large to repress any political opposition using any means possible.  While the legitimacy of the authoritarian government is supported by the clerics, who have been the force behind the conservative religion that is the central to national unity, increased US imperialism has made the monarch to drift away from the Islamic Sharia laws that are fundamental Islamic religion.  The democratic space in the country has been repressed to impede the political opposition a chance to thrive in the country. In the aftermath of the Arab spring, the monarch employed harsh measures intended to crush the slightest form of opposition in the country.

Research Objectives

The primary aim of this research is to explore which factors affect the success of the Saudi Arabia opposition parties in light of authoritarian monarch government that uses all forms of powers to outlaw political opposition in the country.  The study will explore how a wide range of factors empower or disempowers the political opposition in the country.

Objectives

  1. To determine how the political opposition thrive in the face of authoritarian government.
  2. To establish western influence in Saudi Arabia affects the success of the opposition political parties.
  3. Determine whether international financial supports the success of political opposition in Saudi Arabia.
  4. To determine how lack of democracy hinders political opposition activities in Saudi Arabia.
  5. Establish how monarch has learned how best to deal with opposition groups since the Arab Spring.

Research Questions

Research questions help in providing the direction that the research will take. This particular research will use the following research questions

  1. To what extent does lack of democracy affect political opposition, Saudi Arabia?
  2. How has the Arab Spring affected success or failure of political opposition in Saudi Arabia?
  3. How have Western countries affected political opposition in Saudi Arabia?
  4. Which is the main factor that affects the success of the Saudi Arabia political opposition?
  5. How is international financial support shaping the future of political opposition in Saudi Arabia?
  6. What are the achievements of political opposition parties in Saudi Arabia?

The following chapter presents the methodology of the main study in order to examine the research questions.

CHAPTER THREE

Methodology

The study employed a qualitative content analysis approach.  The study extracted data for specific variables of interest including a year of publication, type of publication and availability of the content. The study selected freely available information on the internet which included publications by major digital newspapers, print, websites and scholarly articles. The study employed a systematic coding approach to code a large volume of text to identify to identify patterns or themes and meanings from the texts. The coding approach was developed based on the conventional qualitative content analysis approach. A systematic generation of theory (The Theory of Saudi Arabia Political Opposition) was used to develop codes directly from the texts.  

The code names developed in the study included

  1. Attitude from the West
  2. Democracy
  3. Constitutional monarchy
  4. International financial support
  5. Political openness
  6. Historical hostility among opposition’s groups
  7. Saudi authority suppressing for each group since the Arab Spring

Analysis

While the Saudi Arabia monarchy regime prohibits formation of political opposition outfit in the Kingdom, a number of political parties including The Islamic Umma Party, Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA, Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) and Ghanem Almasarir have been formed in protest to a wide range of issues they do not agree with in the monarch. However, the political outfits have experienced a mix of failures and success in the light of the authoritarian government for a wide range of factors.

Suppression by Saudi Authority after the Arab Spring

The Arab Spring played a significant role in influencing regime change in large part of the Arab World including countries such as Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and Bahrain.Saudi Arabia remained untouched by the Arab Spring by employing successful counterrevolutionary mechanisms. However, the Arab Spring played a vital role in promoting the formation of political opposition in the Kingdom that had experienced limited political opposition activities for several decades (Mabon 2012). The Umma Islamic Party is one of the parties whose position was predominantly influenced by the Arab Spring in 2011. It is regarded as the first opposition political party in Saudi Arabia since it was the first to defy the order that forbade the existence of political parties in Saudi Arabia. Party came into being after nine Saudi scholars, and political activists came together to fight for political reforms. The party was made public on February 9th, 2011. Unlike other organizations that came before and after it, it had a very organized structure with leaders and a well spelled out (Alsalem 2011) . In light of the  Arab Spring that was informed by the need to bring an end to the Authoritarian Regimes in most of the Arab States, The Umma Islamic Party also wanted an end to the authoritarian Saudi monarch regime. The Arab Spring had succeeded in toppling oppressive regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Bahrain and it played a significant role to buttress formation of the first political movement in the Saudi Arabia soil. All the other political movements were operating outside Saudi Arabia including the Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA and Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) which are based in U.K.

Since early 2011 the monarch has taken stern action against Islamist and liberal critics without clear reasons behind the arrests and other measures taken by the government. Open criticism of prominent princes or the ruling family as a whole and overt challenges to the Wahhabi interpretation of Islam predominant in the country drew particularly harsh responses (Mabon 2012). The Islamic Umma Party (Hizb al-Umma al-Islami) which formed a political opposition in the state despite being banned by the monarch government experienced the wrath of the government (Bsheer 2018). The Saudi ruling family assumed that the Islamic Umma Party (Hizb al-Umma al-Islami) wanted to topple their regime despite the party having moderate demands. The founding members of the Islamic Umma Party were arrested but later released on the condition that they would refrain from any form of political activities in the future. Any activist or individual who made any form of provocative demands in the aftermath of the 2011 Arab Spring faced heightened state repression liberal activists such as Muhammad al-Qahtani and Abdallah al-Hamid.

Democracy and Constitutional Monarchy

The Saudi monarch government employs authoritarianism which comprises of a ban on political action, frequent resort to police violence, opacity, and disinformation. Use of excessive power to crack down dissidents through waves of arrests and imprisonments has impacted negatively on political opposition in Saudi Arabia (Matthiesen 2012). Additionally, there is the use of specialized Criminal Courts that use the counterterrorism regulations to repress pro-reform activists and peaceful dissidents. A sheer criticism of the regime through media interview or social media warrants arrest and imprisonment. Arbitrary arrest s of political party leaders and activists coupled with systematic violations of due process and fair trial rights have made it hard for the political opposition to thrive in the country (Ménoret 2016). The authorities detain arrested suspects for months, even years, without judicial review or prosecution with the sole intention of crapping down any form of political opposition. The intellectuals behind the formation of the Umma Party were arrested following the formation of the party. Other party leaders including those of the Movement of Islamic Reform in Arabia, MIRA and Tajdeed Islamic Party (Islamic Renewal party) had to operate from U.K in fear of being arrested and lack of democracy in Saudi Arabia. Ghanem Almasarir, one of the major activists and critics of the Saudi Royal family, operates from U.K. for fear of being arrested.

The Western Attitude

The Al Saud have consolidated their grip on power, against popular protest and unrest, with the aid of the U.S. oil company Aramco and of international security cooperation. In the past decades, the Saudi state has benefited from the French, British, and U.S. input in the design of a brutal repression machine. All the opposition parties in Saudi Arabia are against the Western Imperialism adopted by the royal family in governing the country.  The increased involvement of the Western Powers such as the U.S.A, U.K., France and Germany in the affairs of Kingdom has led to increased modernization which is interpreted as the secularization of the society and western imperialism by the opposition parties (Madawi 2015). In the aftermath of the terror attack on the American soil in 9/11, the American government supported the Saudi Arabia government in the fight against terrorism with the intention of suppressing any form of radicalization in the country. Consequently, the Suadi Arabia government adopted the 2014 terror laws extended the definition of terrorism to cover the peaceful protest, political speech, and organized action (Rosie 2012). The kingdom now has full power to crush any protest or criticism, no matter how peaceful or constructive it may be. Ultimately, the Saudi Arabia opposition today is organized principally on Islamist foundation which is the sense of national pride (Beranek 2009). However, the support of the western powers Saudi Arabia has been able to crush every form on the opposition in the country making opposition activities hard to thrive.

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DeYoung, K. (2018, Mar 22,). Saudi prince denies Kushner is ‘in his pocket.’ The Washington Post Retrieved from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/saudi-prince-denies-kushner-is-in-his-pocket/2018/03/22/701a9c9e-2e22-11e8-8688-e053ba58f1e4_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.92f443989b11

Fotopoulos, T. (2011). The pseudo-revolution in Libya and the degenerate “Left.” International Journal of INCLUSIVE DEMOCRACY, 7(1)

Ignatius, D. (2018, March 1). Are Saudi Arabia’s reforms for real? A recent visit says yes. The Washington Post Retrieved from https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/global-opinions/are-saudi-arabias-reforms-for-real-a-recent-visit-says-yes/2018/03/01/a11a4ca8-1d9d-11e8-9de1-147dd2df3829_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.98d96ec38f59

Jenkins, J. (2017). The gulf and the Muslim Brotherhood Islamism is central to understanding the 2017 GCC diplomatic crisis. Foreign Policy Trends, 33(2)

Justice, P. (2008). Arbitrary detention and unfair trials in the deficient criminal justice system of Saudi Arabia. Human Rights Watch, 20(3)

Kostiner, J. (1996). State, Islam, and opposition in Saudi Arabia: The post-desert storm phase. Terrorism and Political Violence, 8(2), 75-89. doi:10.1080/09546559608427347

Kubersky, R. (2018). Reforms in Saudi Arabia: Real progress or cause of future instability? Retrieved from http://www.sirjournal.org/blogs/2018/2/26/reforms-in-saudi-arabia-real-progress-or-cause-of-future-instability

Mabon, S. (2018). It’s a family affair: Religion, geopolitics and the rise of Mohammed bin Salman. Insight Turkey, 20(2), 51-66. doi:10.25253/99.2018202.04

Mabon, S. (2012). Kingdom in Crisis? The Arab Spring and Instability in Saudi Arabia. Contemporary Security Policy33(3), 530-553.

Madawi, A. (2015). Muted Modernists: The Struggle over Divine Politics in Saudi Arabia (London: Hurst Publishing), pp. 33–34

Matthiesen, T. (2015). The domestic sources of Saudi foreign policy: Islamists and the state in the wake of the Arab uprisings. Washington: Brookings Institution, 1-12.

Matthiesen, T. (2012). A” Saudi Spring?”: The Shi’a Protest Movement in the Eastern Province 2011–2012. The Middle East Journal66(4), 628-659.

Ménoret, P. (2016). Repression and Protest in Saudi Arabia. Middle East Brief n101.

Meijer, R., Aarts, P., Wagemakers, J., & Kanie, M. (2012). Saudi Arabia between conservatism, accommodation, and reform. Clingendael: Netherlands Institute of International Relations.

Qatarileaks. (2017, August 09,). Doha buys al-faqih, al-dokki to attack Saudi Arabia, UAE. Retrieved from https://qatarileaks.com/en/leak/doha-buys-al-faqih-al-dokki-to-attack-saudi-arabia-uae.

Rosie, B. (2012). “Dissent and Its Discontents: Protesting the Saudi State,” in Bassam Haddad, Rosie Bsheer, and Ziad Abu-Rish, The Dawn of the Arab Uprisings: End of an Old Order? London: Pluto Press, pp. 248–259.

Ryan, R. (2005). Saudi Arabia and post 9/11 Islamism opposition. DePaul University:

Salameh, M. G. (2016, July 13,). Saudi Arabia’s vision 2030: A reality or mirage. USAEE Working Paper Retrieved from https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2808611##

Schweizer, K., Steinwascher, M., Moosbrugger, H., & Reiss, S. (2011). The structure of research methodology competency in higher education and the role of teaching teams and course temporal distance. Learning and Instruction, 21(1), 68-76. doi: 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2009.11.002

Stancati, M. (2018, January 10,). Mohammed bin Salman’s next Saudi challenge: Curtailing ultraconservative Islam. The Wall Street Journal Retrieved from https://www.wsj.com/articles/mohammed-bin-salmans-next-saudi-challenge-curtailing-ultraconservative-islam-1515525944

Teitelbaum, J., & Pipes, D. (2001, Holier than thou: Saudi Arabia’s Islamic opposition. Middle East Quarterly, VIII, 75. Retrieved from http://mdx.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV1LS8NAEB4sXhQPtdZXFRYPeiiRJJs0qeChSqUtKIXW4q1ski0G-sK0YP-9M9k8WoWiBy9LMoFN4Bu-nZ18swPAzVtd-8YJHnfqnm5L0_YE-pAua74bGH4g6xgxcKlElvbgrfbScLp534vc9q_Aow2hp0LaP4CfTYoGvEYXwBGdAMdfuUFrNqZ6EkqQkxhoSRmAnlgGYbXxITxSylK-nvwi9KuzearhWo9Zn-McRrUporgGc1MD2pcYs449odold2bR-zIj-m44VySk6tg3EgxGJlVLORFZQKtbqmtGSpqDdru95h7WGgeqTijJaoo3dIb5JAj9xb2caq-9AhS4Q70m3IdOtmY6tq1KIZJX_VgZ4-W-X4R9KgFh6r_JIezIaQnK6kCVFbtmdFqviDsir0pwspFTZZm4sATFRFuI1oRBj4ArPBjhwQiPOxajwRQaNxFLsGA5FmW4emr2H1ta-q1D4VGCyl9EQ9z5Y7RlmOYxHAgqVpgu4qLG4BQYxrVSd6WQ3BhZPpe4y7E81-COJWlL7p5BZcuM51ufVmAvB_ECdkfoyPISCpPg8wvYVCOc

Thompson, M. C. (2017). Saudi vision 2030: A viable response to youth aspirations and concerns? Asian Affairs, 48(2), 205-221.

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Conflict Resolution Paper

Nursing Essay Discussion Papers

Week 3: Conflict Resolution Paper

The purpose of this assignment is to learn how to identify and effectively manage conflicts that arise in care delivery settings resulting in better management of patient care, including appropriate delegation. You will gain insight into conflict management strategies and develop a plan to collaborate with a potential nurse leader about the conflict and its impact in a practice setting. Course Outcomes Completion of this assignment enables the student to meet the following course outcomes. CO1: Apply leadership concepts, skills, and decision making in the provision of high-quality nursing care, healthcare team management, and the oversight and accountability for care delivery in a variety of settings. (PO2) CO3: Participate in the development and implementation of imaginative and creative strategies to enable systems to change. (PO7) CO6: Develop a personal awareness of complex organizational systems, and integrate values and beliefs with organizational mission. (PO7) CO7: Apply leadership concepts in the development and initiation of effective plans for the microsystems and system-wide practice improvements that will improve the quality of healthcare delivery. (POs 2 and 3)

Week 5: Nursing Care Models Paper

The purpose of this assignment is to identify nursing care models utilized in today’s various health care settings and enhance your knowledge of how models impact the management of care and may influence delegation. You will assess the effectiveness of models and determine how you would collaborate with a nurse leader to identify opportunities for improvement to ensure quality, safety and staff satisfaction. Course Outcomes Completion of this assignment enables the student to meet the following course outcomes. CO1: Apply leadership concepts, skills, and decision making in the provision of high quality nursing care, healthcare team management, and the oversight and accountability for care delivery in a variety of settings. (PO2) CO2: Implement patient safety and quality improvement initiatives within the context of the interprofessional team through communication and relationship building. (PO3) CO3: Participate in the development and implementation of imaginative and creative strategies to enable systems to change. (PO7) CO6: Develop a personal awareness of complex organizational systems and integrate values and beliefs with organizational mission. (PO7) CO7: Apply leadership concepts in the development and initiation of effective plans for the microsystems and/or system-wide practice improvements that will improve the quality of healthcare delivery. (PO2, and 3) CO8: Apply concepts of quality and safety using structure, process, and outcome measures to identify clinical questions as the beginning process of changing current practice. (PO8)

Week 6: Performance Measurement PowerPoint Slide Show

The purpose of this PowerPoint presentation is to locate and compare performance measurement data on common health conditions for the hospitals in your area. You will investigate the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services websites and locate hospital compare data for hospitals within a 50-mile radius of the community where you are working or had your prelicensure clinical experiences. You will prepare a PowerPoint presentation and share the results of your findings. Opportunities for improving performance measurement indicators will be shared. Course Outcomes Completion of this assignment enables the student to meet the following course outcomes. CO1: Apply leadership concepts, skills, and decision making in the provision of high-quality nursing care, healthcare team management, and the oversight and accountability for care delivery in a variety of settings. (PO2) CO2: Implement patient safety and quality improvement initiatives within the context of the interprofessional team through communication and relationship building. (PO3) CO3: Participate in the development and implementation of imaginative and creative strategies to enable systems to change. (PO7) CO7: Apply leadership concepts in the development and initiation of effective plans for the microsystems and system-wide practice improvements that will improve the quality of healthcare delivery. (POs 2 and 3) CO8: Apply concepts of quality and safety using structure, process and outcome measures to identify clinical questions as the beginning process of changing current practice. (PO8)

 

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How the nursing challenge creates a gap or conflict between the organizations statements and practice

How the nursing challenge creates a gap or conflict between the organization’s statements and practice
Write a 4 page impact report to senior leadership that identifies a nursing-related challenge, analyzes how it affects the organization from a nursing perspective, and details the new position.

Each organization has a unique structure that impacts the behavior of the organization. In health care organizations, this impact is on the ability of the organization to deliver quality patient care. Nursing is an essential component of any health care organization, and nursing leaders must understand the role of nursing and nursing leadership within the total organization. Understanding basic organizational structure, mission, vision, philosophy, and values will better prepare nurse leaders to improve quality and patient outcomes.

Context:

Organizational Structure, Systems Theory, and Leadership

Embedded within the AONE (2015) competencies for nursing leaders are various components of systems thinking and systems leadership. Nursing leaders need to perform a historical review of organizational theories because it helps them understand the effect of structures and theories that are relevant to health care organizational systems. This understanding leads to knowledge on how these systems affect the role and scope of nursing practice.

Systems theory came into use within the business sector following a publication on the subject by Peter Senge. As time progressed, health care leaders adapted principles from systems theory and applied them to health care organizations and systems. Systems theory maintains that the parts of the whole affect each other in many ways, with interactions so complex that any event or action may have multiple consequences across the entire whole (Senge, 1990).

Effective Communication

Communication is a key competency for nurse executives. It may involve verbal, nonverbal, written, electronic, and other communication modalities. Communication among members of teams, between departments and service lines, within large networks, with strategic business partners, and with patients, families, or support persons requires awareness of various facets of effective communication.

References

AONE. (2015). Nurse executive competencies. Retrieved from http://www.aone.org/resources/leadership%20tools/nursecomp.shtml

Senge, P. M. (1990). The fifth discipline: The art and practice of the learning organization. New York, NY: Currency Doubleday.

To deepen your understanding, you are encouraged to consider the questions below and discuss them with a fellow learner, a work associate, an interested friend, or a member of the heath care community.

· What is the relationship between an organization’s structure, mission, vision, philosophy, values, and policies and procedures?

· What strategies does your health care organization (or one that you are familiar with) use when making changes within the organization?

· How do you see nurse leaders participating in the process of organizational change?

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QUESTION 11. Your team has been assigned the task of sharing a model to help understand conflict styles. As team leader, describe the Kilmann Thomass Managerial Grid model to your team. Your re

QUESTION 11. Your team has been assigned the task of sharing a model to help understand conflict styles. As team leader, describe the Kilmann Thomas’s Managerial Grid model to your team. Your re

 


QUESTION 1

1.       Your team has been assigned the task of sharing a model to help understand conflict styles. As team leader, describe the Kilmann Thomas’s Managerial Grid model to your team. Your response must be at least 200 words in length.

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QUESTION 2

1.       Your manager has requested you to assist with training on work relationships. Describe the four types of work relationships and a real-life scenario to illustrate each type of relationship. Your response must be at least 200 words in length.

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QUESTION 3

1.       You have been asked to assist a coworker with a conflict issue. What are two ways you could assist your coworker with learning how to manage the current relational conflict? Your response must be at least 200 words in length.

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QUESTION 4

1.       Take the “How Ethical Is Your Boss?” questionnaire located on page 71 of your textbook. Describe your results and how your boss’s level of ethical leadership influences your behaviors and feelings at work. Your response must be at least 200 words in length.

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How does dickens present the conflict of fact and fancy in hard times grade b

The novel Hard Times by Charles Dickens epitomises the social, political and economic values of Victorian England. Dickens attacks the conditions and exploitation of the workers by the factory owners, the social class divisions that favour dishonesty over honesty depending on the hierarchy of class status. He finds the utilitarian (fact) school of thought where facts and statistic’s are emphasised at the expense of imagination, art, feelings and wonder (fancy) emerging during this period disconcerting.

Hard Times is divided into three separate books entitled: ‘Sowing’, ‘Reaping’ and ‘Garnering’. These sections exemplify the biblical concept of ‘whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap’ [Galatians 6:7]. Dickens uses harvesting as a symbol of something that is unchangeable and fancy as something that is changeable in people’s mind and imaginations. He demonstrates that both fancy and fact must work together in order for one to become a healthy human being. The central character of Hard Times who most embodies the factual approach is Thomas Gradgrind.

He is introduced to the readership at the beginning of the novel. In chapter one, ‘One Thing Needful’, Thomas Gradgrind is shown as the ‘speaker’. He is described to have a ‘square forefinger’ and ‘square wall of a forehead’ and their voice is described as ‘inflexible’, ‘dry’ and ‘dictatorial’. Dickens uses humour to exemplify the shape of his head: ‘all covered with knobs, like the crust of a plum pie’, this humorous mocking of Gradgrind’s appearance by Dickens, establishes Dickens position on the factual interpretation of life by the utilitarians.

Gradgrind is therefore a character that represents facts as his grotesque appearance reflects his method of teaching and furthermore the name ‘Gradgrind’ reflects the dull and repetitive motion of grinding. This reinforces the fact that Gradgrind’s teaching methods are as wearying as industrial processes. Gradgrind’s name could also imply that his characteristics have been ground down to the ideologies he now promotes. In the novel Gradgrind is man of facts; he believes that the education system should be based on the philosophy of utilitarianism.

Utilitarianism is a philosophical and political movement which gained interest in the nineteenth century. “Now, what I want is, Facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but Fact. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out nothing else”. These emphatic proclamations are presented to the readership at the beginning of the novel. Gradgrind adopted this philosophy with vigour for his own children. Later on in the story Gradgrind is forced to acknowledge that his refusal to accept the validity of “fancy” had sown the seeds to the destruction of a happy life for his two eldest children.

His first realisation occurs when his eldest daughter confides in him about her failed marriage to Mr Bounderby. Louisa feels no emotion toward her husband, this leads to the contemplation of the possible affair with Mr Harthouse. This is where the readers first see Louisa break away from her utilitarian upbringing and embrace a more fanciful approach to life. Louisa is in pain and in her agony tells her that he: ‘‘trained me from my cradle… I curse the hour in which I was born to such a destiny… what you have done with the garden that bloomed once, In this great wilderness”.

Gradgrind in his astonishment expresses woefully “I never knew you were unhappy, my child”. She collapses to the floor into an insensible torpor, refusing help from her father. Furthermore, Gradgrind has to help his son Tom who has grown up to be a selfish, self-centred young man who discovers the pleasures of gambling. Tom conceals his hunger for fanciful gambling; here Dickens reveals that even in the most severe school, fancy lies underneath. This tempts him to steal from the bank at which he is employed. He then has to be smuggled abroad to avoid imprisonment.

Tom ruthlessly frames an innocent man Stephen Blackpool for this crime. Stephen suffers the destiny to die for Tom’s crime of stealing money thus becoming a victim of the harshness of the philosophy of Fact. Dickens uses minor characters throughout his novel Hard Times to further illustrate what he believes to be a suffocating method of teaching in his continued argument about fact and fancy. The readership is introduced to the character Mr M’Choakumchild, whose name is used satirically to reflect the choking of the children in Gradgrind’s school.

Bitzer, primarily Gradgrind’s favourite student, encompasses the biblical reference of ‘whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap’ as he becomes the very symbol of evil in the education system in which poor children are used as fodder for industrial profit. Dickens believed that these schools restricted the children’s imagination, emotions and freedom, training them as factory workers for the emerging industries. Dickens uses description and symbolism to illustrate the seriousness of ‘fact’ and lack of ‘fancy’.

In the beginning of the novel Dickens starts by describing the classroom as “plain, bare, monotonous vault of a school”. Dickens satirizes the classroom by calling it a “Vault” which is an allusion to a grave or catacomb. He extends his illustration to the setting of his novel in a fictional northern industrial town called Coketown. The name “Coketown” is symbolic as it is a term for a mineral used in the process of iron making. Therefore, the town becomes representative of industrialization as an idea.

Dickens also uses repetition of words to build up a description. For instance in his description of Coketown from book one, chapter five; “It contained several large streets, all very like one another, and many small streets still more like one another, inhabited by people equally like one another, who all went in and out at the same hours, with the same sound upon the same pavement, to so the same and work and to whom every day was the same as yesterday and to-morrow, and every year the counterpart of the last and the next”.

The long sentences within chapter five reflect the drudgery of the working class, also the repetition of the words; “same” and “like one another”, emphasis monotone and dreariness which advocates the lack of diversity and ‘fancy’. As an author, Dickens would have been concerned that lack of imagination was stifling children; not allowing them to develop as individuals. It is evident throughout the novel as to how much Dickens opposes the Utilitarian philosophy of education.

However, it can equally be argued that Dickens believes that living by “fancy” alone is also detrimental to one’s character. This is exemplified through Mr Bounderby and Mrs Sparsit. Initially Mr Bounderby the wealthy factory owner of Coketown, who is a close friend of Gradgrind, can be said to representative of “fact” as he completely buys into the Gradgrind philosophy “fact, more facts and only facts”. Bounderby thinks about his worker as faceless, unemotional “Hands”. He is the epitome of the Industrialist that Dickens dislikes so much.

However, Bounderby is the most imaginative character in the novel as he is able to maintain a detailed fake story about being an abandoned child who was born in a ‘‘ditch’’ and is a completely self-made man, when he indeed grew up in a wealthy and loving family. He points to his fictional hard childhood to make the workers look like complainers when they make demands to improve their working conditions. Mrs Sparsit is entirely “fanciful”. She is an upper middle class lady who has fallen on hard times. She is employed by Bounderby as a housekeeper.

Mrs Sparsit is found to a manipulative and dishonest woman who is jealous of Louisa and constantly spies on her. She fancies that the marriage between Louisa and Bounderby will end in disaster as she notices they do not share a bedroom. Dickens states that Mrs Sparsit “took an idea in the nature of an allegorical fancy, into her head. … She erected in her mind a mighty staircase, with a dark pit of shame and ruin at the bottom”. Dickens insinuates here, that Mrs Sparsit has a lot of fancy and imagination. She is consequently dismissed from her job when Bounderby realises she is interfering in his private life.

Dickens uses Sissy Jupe as a contrast to the philosophy of just fact and just fancy. He uses her to depict that fact and fancy can collaborate in order to create a healthy human being. Sissy Jupe is the daughter of a circus performer, when her father abandons her she comes to live with Gradgrind as a servant. The reader is first introduced to Sissy Jupe in the second chapter “Murdering the Innocents” where she is identified as “girl number twenty”. In this chapter Gradgrind asks her “Would you use a carpet having representation of flowers upon it? ” Sissy Replies “if you would please, sir, I am fond of flowers”.

This reinforces the argument that Sissy represents a practical form of fancy. Sissy also represents imagination, creativity, and selfless actions, all three elements are illustrated in the passage where Sissy cheers up her father after a hard day in the circus ring by reading him fairy tales about ogres and giants. She is also presented as someone with a realistic and matter-of-fact character. It was for this reason that Sissy could not understand the abstract philosophy of fact. It is further demonstrated when Sissy is questioned about “how very unimportant a few deaths in a thousand people are”.

She sensibly answers “that to the families of those dead people, those deaths are actually quite significant indeed”. The form of the novel, Hard Times, allows Dickens to unravel the complexity of the philosophies of fact and fancy through the interactions between the two schools of thought lived by the characters. Dickens presents the failure of fact through the tragic ending of the novel which highlights the fact that living a life of just fact or just fancy will result in tragedy. Gradgrind’s children are raised in an environment where fancy is discouraged; as a result they end up with serious social dysfunctions.

Louisa remains unable to connect with others even though she has the desire to do so and Tom becomes a hedonist who has little regard for others. However, Sissy has a life of joy, a happy marriage and children due to the fact that she grew up surrounded by circus life, which enabled her to constantly indulge in the fancy forbidden to the Gradgrind children, nevertheless, Sissy is frequently reminded of the practicality of facts by Mr Gradgrind, which gave her the stability of leading a contented life that embodies both fact and fancy.

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The Essential Workplace Conflict Handbook

The Essential Workplace Conflict Handbook.

First, read Chapter 5 in The Essential Workplace Conflict Handbook and review your work with SMART goals from Module Two.

Next, carefully read the MEASURE Supplementary Document and, using your actual organization’s conflict (or the Garden Depot case study), Measure the problem or problems you Defined in Module Two. Use the Organization A Example Flowchart to help you organize your thinking, and then put the information from your flowchart into a Measure gap-analysis table using the Measure Gap-Analysis Table Template. Upload this table to the discussion.

The Essential Workplace Conflict Handbook

In your initial post, address the following:

  • What were some challenges you encountered in identifying the variables (ethical, moral, or legal) that were or are present between employees and the organization you evaluated?
  • How will you apply what you have learned about transforming qualitative information to quantitative data to identify and analyze gaps in your final project case study’s organizational conflict?

In responding to your peers, reflect upon the issues addressed in the Measure phase, and recommend revisions.

Use specific examples from your own organizational conflict or the Garden Depot case study in your initial posts and in your responses to other students’ posts.

The Essential Workplace Conflict Handbook

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Potential issues of healthcare conflict on members

Potential issues of healthcare conflict on members.

This is an assignment that focuses on the potential issues of healthcare conflict on members. Additionally, the paper discusses the strategies to implement to prevent dangerous patient outcomes.

Potential issues of healthcare conflict on members

Y‌‌‍‌‌‍‍‍‌‍‍‌‍‍‍‌‌‌‍ou are a family nurse practitioner working in an outpatient primary care office of a large hospital system. The practice has been operating for over 15 years. Many of the administrative and clinical staff were hired when the practice opened. You have been in the practice for less than 3 months. In that short amount of time, you have witnessed several of the clinical staff engaging in heated arguments with each other, sometimes in-patient areas. You overhear an argument occurring today between two staff. You pick up a patient’s chart and notice a very low blood pressure that the medical assistant failed to notify you about.

When you confront the MA, she states that she was going to report the vital signs to you when she became engaged in the heated argument you overheard and forgot to notify you. Unfortunately, this pattern of behavior is not unusual in this pra‌‌‍‌‌‍‍‍‌‍‍‌‍‍‍‌‌‌‍ctice. Working with staff who cannot cooperate effectively can negatively influence your ability to spend time with patients, can impede the flow of patients through the office, and could impact patient safety.

Case Study Responses:

Firstly, analyze the case study for potential issues for members of the healthcare team from office conflict. Contrast the potential effects for each member of the healthcare team based upon the required readings from the week. Discuss the potential ethical and legal implications for each of the following practice members:

  • Medical assistant
  • Nurse Practitioner
  • Medical Director
  • Practice

Secondly, what strategies would you implement to prevent further episodes of potentially dangerous patient outcomes?

Lastly, what leadership qualities would you apply to effect positive change in the practice? Focus on the culture of the practice‌‌‍‌‌‍‍‍‌‍‍‌‍‍‍‌‌‌‍

Potential issues of healthcare conflict on members

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Role of leadership in managing conflict in an organization

Role of leadership in managing conflict in an organization.

This is an assignment that discusses the role of leadership in managing conflict. Additionally, the paper also focuses on the various tools and strategies that can be used to improve communication.

Role of leadership in managing conflict in an organization

Firstly, imagine you are working with a partner to plan and host a workshop on leadership. There will be 100 people attending. Within this assignment you will be creating a document that discusses the main components of leadership and corporate culture.

Secondly, write a three to five (3-5) page paper in which you: 1. Address a key leadership trait that can assist in managing conflict. 2. Discuss a tool or strategy a leader can adopt for improving communication within the organization. 3. Describe some methods for motivating employees and improving behaviors within the workplace. 4. Format your assignment according to the following formatting requirements: a. This course requires use of new Strayer Writing Standards (SWS). The format is different than other Strayer University courses.

Thirdly, please take a moment to review the SWS documentation for details. The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are: • Describe the primary functions of management (planning, organizing, leading, controlling) and the associated skills, tools, and theoretical approaches that can be used to accomplish these functions. • Explain the principal theories of leadership and motivation, and describe the fundamental considerations in managing and motivating individual and group behavior. • Describe actions to improve communications, manage conflict, develop strong organizational culture, and improve the ethical behavior in organizations. • Use technology and information resources to research issues in management concepts.

Lastly, write clearly and concisely about management concepts using proper writing mechanics. Ensure that you follow the given guidelines in regards to referencing and citation.as given by the instructor. Please add the sources that you will use in the assignment and they should be cited accordingly.

Role of leadership in managing conflict in an organization

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