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Development vs. Gentrification: Competing Narratives of Msheireb Doha

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Development vs. Gentrification: Competing Narratives of Msheireb Doha. / Khan, A.; Karn, A.
In: Journal of Arabian Studies, Vol. 13, No. 2, 31.12.2023, p. 361-383.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Khan, A & Karn, A 2023, 'Development vs. Gentrification: Competing Narratives of Msheireb Doha', Journal of Arabian Studies, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 361-383. https://doi.org/10.1080/21534764.2024.2383691

APA

Vancouver

Khan A, Karn A. Development vs. Gentrification: Competing Narratives of Msheireb Doha. Journal of Arabian Studies. 2023 Dec 31;13(2):361-383. doi: 10.1080/21534764.2024.2383691

Author

Khan, A. ; Karn, A. / Development vs. Gentrification : Competing Narratives of Msheireb Doha. In: Journal of Arabian Studies. 2023 ; Vol. 13, No. 2. pp. 361-383.

Bibtex

@article{20aceb667b784671a9e8c81ccfc708c5,
title = "Development vs. Gentrification: Competing Narratives of Msheireb Doha",
abstract = "This paper critically engages with discourses of development in the Persian Gulf by focusing on the narratives surrounding Msheireb, comparing state-sponsored histories and the accounts of migrant inhabitants of the city center. Msheireb is an interesting case study as both a historic neighborhood in the heart of Doha, and as a bustling, contemporary metropolitan area in Qatar. It is in this duality that the competing narratives around Msheireb surface, producing a picturesque, modern neighborhood ripe with cafes and luxury retail brands in high-rise buildings, while the outskirts embody the run-down and historic Msheireb populated by low-rise buildings that house workers{\textquoteright} accommodation, and small migrant-run establishments such as garages, grocery stores, and tea shops. While Downtown Msheireb gains popularity as a modern and exciting neighborhood, historic Msheireb has endured rapid gentrification since the 2010s, displacing communities of low-income migrant workers that have inhabited the neighborhood since the 1970s. We demonstrate that state-sponsored narratives of Msheireb overlook the presence and the contributions of migrant workers in the country; they position Msheireb as a Qatari neighborhood dilapidated by temporary migrant inhabitance, now being rejuvenated by the Msheireb Downtown Doha project. Migrant inhabitants recall inhabiting Msheireb as a lively and accessible residential and commercial neighborhood between the 1970s and 2010s, that they are now alienated from. This paper probes such competing narratives of inhabitance of the neighborhood, the complex identities and positionalities of those who inhabit it, and the politics, power relations, gender dynamics, and hegemonic discourses that (de)legitimize migrants{\textquoteright} lived experiences.",
keywords = "displacement, gender, gentrification, memory, Qatar",
author = "A. Khan and A. Karn",
year = "2023",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1080/21534764.2024.2383691",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "361--383",
journal = "Journal of Arabian Studies",
issn = "2153-4780",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Development vs. Gentrification

T2 - Competing Narratives of Msheireb Doha

AU - Khan, A.

AU - Karn, A.

PY - 2023/12/31

Y1 - 2023/12/31

N2 - This paper critically engages with discourses of development in the Persian Gulf by focusing on the narratives surrounding Msheireb, comparing state-sponsored histories and the accounts of migrant inhabitants of the city center. Msheireb is an interesting case study as both a historic neighborhood in the heart of Doha, and as a bustling, contemporary metropolitan area in Qatar. It is in this duality that the competing narratives around Msheireb surface, producing a picturesque, modern neighborhood ripe with cafes and luxury retail brands in high-rise buildings, while the outskirts embody the run-down and historic Msheireb populated by low-rise buildings that house workers’ accommodation, and small migrant-run establishments such as garages, grocery stores, and tea shops. While Downtown Msheireb gains popularity as a modern and exciting neighborhood, historic Msheireb has endured rapid gentrification since the 2010s, displacing communities of low-income migrant workers that have inhabited the neighborhood since the 1970s. We demonstrate that state-sponsored narratives of Msheireb overlook the presence and the contributions of migrant workers in the country; they position Msheireb as a Qatari neighborhood dilapidated by temporary migrant inhabitance, now being rejuvenated by the Msheireb Downtown Doha project. Migrant inhabitants recall inhabiting Msheireb as a lively and accessible residential and commercial neighborhood between the 1970s and 2010s, that they are now alienated from. This paper probes such competing narratives of inhabitance of the neighborhood, the complex identities and positionalities of those who inhabit it, and the politics, power relations, gender dynamics, and hegemonic discourses that (de)legitimize migrants’ lived experiences.

AB - This paper critically engages with discourses of development in the Persian Gulf by focusing on the narratives surrounding Msheireb, comparing state-sponsored histories and the accounts of migrant inhabitants of the city center. Msheireb is an interesting case study as both a historic neighborhood in the heart of Doha, and as a bustling, contemporary metropolitan area in Qatar. It is in this duality that the competing narratives around Msheireb surface, producing a picturesque, modern neighborhood ripe with cafes and luxury retail brands in high-rise buildings, while the outskirts embody the run-down and historic Msheireb populated by low-rise buildings that house workers’ accommodation, and small migrant-run establishments such as garages, grocery stores, and tea shops. While Downtown Msheireb gains popularity as a modern and exciting neighborhood, historic Msheireb has endured rapid gentrification since the 2010s, displacing communities of low-income migrant workers that have inhabited the neighborhood since the 1970s. We demonstrate that state-sponsored narratives of Msheireb overlook the presence and the contributions of migrant workers in the country; they position Msheireb as a Qatari neighborhood dilapidated by temporary migrant inhabitance, now being rejuvenated by the Msheireb Downtown Doha project. Migrant inhabitants recall inhabiting Msheireb as a lively and accessible residential and commercial neighborhood between the 1970s and 2010s, that they are now alienated from. This paper probes such competing narratives of inhabitance of the neighborhood, the complex identities and positionalities of those who inhabit it, and the politics, power relations, gender dynamics, and hegemonic discourses that (de)legitimize migrants’ lived experiences.

KW - displacement

KW - gender

KW - gentrification

KW - memory

KW - Qatar

U2 - 10.1080/21534764.2024.2383691

DO - 10.1080/21534764.2024.2383691

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 361

EP - 383

JO - Journal of Arabian Studies

JF - Journal of Arabian Studies

SN - 2153-4780

IS - 2

ER -