http://www.carnegieendowment.org/arb/?fa=show&article=41286

Saudi Arabia
What Does "Reform" Mean in Saudi Arabia?
comments 
Neil Partrick July 27, 2010 

Under the ageing King Abdullah, those in the al-Saud family seeking to advance 
economic, legal, and political (or, perhaps more accurately, administrative) 
reform seem to be in a race against the clock. The assumption of many inside 
the Kingdom is that the next two to three years could be decisive. Elite 
figures sympathetic to reform are concerned that what has been achieved-modest 
by international standards, significant by Saudi Arabia's-will stall under a 
King Sultan or a King Naif (the more likely of the two, given health concerns 
about Crown Prince Sultan).  Changes made since Abdullah acceded in 2005 lack 
an institutional basis and have not captured the imagination of the Saudi 
public, leading to the impression that they constitute personal whims that can 
just as easily be taken back or put indefinitely on the back burner.

Reform in Saudi Arabia does not constitute a clearly articulated program 
intended to reach a defined outcome; rather, what is often referred to as 
reform is more about changing the environment. A more open environment has 
certainly emerged in the last few years. Various media outlets controlled by 
Saudi Arabia's competitive ruling elite publish different commentaries on the 
local and regional political scene.  But this is not a true debate; it is more 
a public posting of distinct opinions. Among the issues receiving the most 
attention are the appropriate role of women and the related role of the 
mutawa'in (religious police), public sector corruption, education reform, and 
the need for Saudi nationals to be better equipped for a more dynamic private 
sector. 

Thus far reform has largely meant putting putative reformers behind key desks 
in ministries and public bodies. So, in marked contrast to Saudi tradition and 
to the wider regional trend, the education ministry has become something of a 
reformist fiefdom, at least as far as the top jobs are concerned, making it an 
important focus of Abdullah patronage in the intra-Saud power play. Actual 
reform of educational practice, however, has not progressed beyond some 
curricula and course book changes, as well as the establishment of a 
controversial co-educational island of excellence, the King Abdullah University 
of Science and Technology (KAUST) near Jeddah.  KAUST, notably, is not under 
the authority of the higher education ministry, even though it is envisaged 
that it will eventually be subjected to formal state control. One area that is 
likely to get attention, whoever succeeds Abdullah, is technical training. 
Saudi Arabia cannot bridge the gap between population and economic growth 
without obliging Saudi nationals to work more, and for less, in the private 
sector. 

Judicial reforms have in practice seen the creation of a new Supreme Court as 
the highest court of appeal, but this is essentially a name change for what was 
previously a function of the Supreme Council of the Judiciary (SCJ). The new 
role envisaged for the SCJ, the training of often ill-informed judges, has yet 
to begin. Although many of the salaried 'ulema (clerics) remain the same highly 
conservative old breed, the SCJ is under new management. Codification of 
shari'a (Islamic law) -potentially important for a more predictable legal 
environment for business and those seeking redress for human rights 
infractions-has been agreed upon. When it will be published in an authorized 
majalla (gazette) or written compendium of legal judgments designed to 
constitute legal precedent, is less clear. A previous official majalla dating 
back to the era of Ibn Saud, who founded the state in 1932, soon fell into 
disuse.

Getting the Higher Council of 'Ulema to agree to codification in principle has 
taken several years. With the exception of big ticket items such as the foreign 
investment law and Qur'an-based punishments for social crimes, anything 
resembling written law is pretty much uncharted territory in the Kingdom. An 
eventual new majalla is not expected to redirect Saudi law onto a new, more 
liberal, footing, but rather to create a more transparent and predictable legal 
path for Saudis and for foreign businesses. Controversial social issues, such 
as male guardianship over adult women and the inequities of child marriage, are 
the subject of extensive media debate but there is no expectation that the 
promised majalla will change them fundamentally.

Regarding economic reform, the traditional clientelism of what remains an 
essentially rentier state stands in the way of an entrepreneurial class that 
could in time be the basis of political change. A patronized Saudi private 
sector that is not very private and that depends on state/princely patronage is 
likely to remain a feature of Saudi political economy. Share offerings may be 
resumed at pre-recession levels, but these are minority stakes mainly for Saudi 
nationals. Majority ownership is liable to remain in the hands of the powerful 
few, while much of public industry is likely to see at most only privatization 
of a minority holding. 

Regarding explicitly political reform, there is little progress. King Abdullah 
has scaled back his ambitions on this front due to fears among the more 
conservative senior al-Saud that even prospective partly elected and relatively 
disempowered regional councils would create a dangerous precedent. The second 
round of elections to the local councils originally scheduled for 2009 have 
been postponed to 2011. The King's focus is rather on making the public sector 
more efficient, with corruption in particular being quietly targeted. More 
significant changes, such as giving the Majlis al-Shura (consultative council, 
the Kingdom's appointed quasi-parliament) any actual powers, are unlikely for 
now. There is some attention to the more modest issue of broadening Shura 
membership to make it represent more of the different strands of Saudi society. 
 

All in all, substantive Saudi reform is largely illusive. While the media 
commentariat are active, the jury is out on what the practical impact will be. 
So far, a change in the mood music without an institutional basis for greater 
progress has had little effect on the attitudes or expectations of Saudi 
nationals, many of whom are understandably circumspect about the sustainability 
of current policies after Abdullah. 

Neil Partrick is a Middle East consultant and an associate fellow at the Royal 
United Services Institute in London. 



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