Since its establishment in 1934 up until 1991, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia had no constitution or other basic laws. It seemed as if the issue was the sole business of the members of the royal family who treat authority as a spoil. They consider the mere act of drafting a constitution or enacting rules of governance a threat to the absolute ruler and an incentive for the people to intervene in the affairs of their masters.
English
Making Sense of the Saudi “Constitution”
Articles from Saudi Arabia
How to Succeed in the Business of Ruling by Not Trying to Educate Anyone
From within the strange kingdom of Saudi Arabia, an impassioned critique of a public education system so afraid of dissent that it stuffs the kingdom’s young minds with religion and...
The Islamic State: Saudi Arabia’s Dark Twin
The Islamic State-known to Arabs as DAESH-is essentially a product of Saudi Arabian politics and financing, writes Jamal Mohammed Taqi in al-Safir al-Arabi. But has the Saudi state’s strange offspring...
ISIS and the Saudi Regime
ISIS abides by the jurisprudence of Jihad – religious war – intertwined with takfir- declaring others as infidel – and religious migration. This is the essence of the Wahhabi...
From the same author
How to Succeed in the Business of Ruling by Not Trying to Educate Anyone
From within the strange kingdom of Saudi Arabia, an impassioned critique of a public education system so afraid of dissent that it stuffs the kingdom’s young minds with religion and...
The Islamic State: Saudi Arabia’s Dark Twin
The Islamic State-known to Arabs as DAESH-is essentially a product of Saudi Arabian politics and financing, writes Jamal Mohammed Taqi in al-Safir al-Arabi. But has the Saudi state’s strange offspring...
ISIS and the Saudi Regime
ISIS abides by the jurisprudence of Jihad – religious war – intertwined with takfir- declaring others as infidel – and religious migration. This is the essence of the Wahhabi...