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Articles

“Building glass refrigerators in the desert”: discourses of urban sustainability and nation building in Qatar

Pages 1118-1139 | Received 17 Feb 2014, Accepted 17 May 2014, Published online: 26 Aug 2014
 

Abstract

Planners around the Arab Gulf states are increasingly drawing on narratives about “urban sustainability,” despite the fact that the explosive growth of urban centers in the Arabian desert largely defies the logic of sustainability. In this article, I consider how and with what effect these narratives have been deployed by various actors in Doha, Qatar. Eschewing a simple economistic reading, I highlight political geographic context and analyze how actors mobilize and rework these discourses. Drawing on mixed-methods fieldwork in Fall 2013, I illustrate how sustainability narratives are mobilized together with nationalist tropes about modernizing Qatar and building up the country’s international prestige, while preserving local traditions and culture through the built environment. With a focus on recent efforts to green Doha, this analysis sheds light on the disciplining function of nationalist discourses in the production and constitution of what it means to label development practices “green” in contemporary Qatar.

Acknowledgments

I would like to thank the three anonymous reviewers for their useful feedback, though all remaining faults are my own. Thanks also to Mohanalakshmi Rajakumar for her help with organizing the focus groups.

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