Saudi Aramco

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    Kingdom and the Narrative of Empire The story of Arabian American Oil Company (ARAMCO), the United States, and Saudi Arabia is a tale that has been told countless times throughout the history of mankind. ARAMCO is another chapter in the endless saga of empire and global capitalism that has spread around the world with the aid of multinational corporations over a period of several centuries. Many of the techniques used in Saudi Arabia beginning in the 1930s were similar to practices used throughout history

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    effectiveness of the certification programs. Healthcare accreditation isan important activity in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia bearing in mind the vast population of the country and the high number of hospitals operating in the kingdom. Saudi Arabia has approximately 27 million people and more than 415 hospitals (Central Department of Statistics, 2010). In addition, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is the second largest oil producer (Ramady, 2010). The kingdom also occupies 830, 000sq mi, approximately

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    It’s noted that the greatest threat Europe faces isn’t cyberwarfare, cyber terrorism, or espionage, but rather software and hardware failure. (Information Management Journal, 2015). One of the key challenges to resolving infrastructure weakness is that each country approaches it differently. In recent years, cybersecurity was an intermediary international concern in Europe and privacy was the principal concern for Europeans. On the Internet, Europeans promote the “right to be forgotten” and they

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    Since the 1950s, the cities of Saudi Arabia witnessed significant changes in the composition of the population and the arrangement of the built environment. The Saudi society has transformed from a nomadic pastoral society to a highly modernized one as a result of the increase in national revenues from oil production. Rapid growth and improved economic conditions led to the adoption of modern planning principles which are in contrary to the traditional city. Although modernization had contributed

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    International Relations Essay

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    Introduction: At the end of WWII in 1945, Western Europe and arguably the entire world looked to the United States for a recovery plan. Great Britain was loosing control over its colonies, France and Germany had been destroyed by the war, and the Soviet Union was gaining power. This put the United States in a position of power, the question that arises with this is, does the United States try to gain control as the hegemonic power in the international system? Is there a real necessity in the region

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    ladder of success. Such corporate events include the celebrations of turkey’s biggest football club Galatasaray. Following its success in Turkey, the company branched out into neighbouring Middle Eastern countries through franchises in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Dubai,

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    Is the lack of non-renewable resources a threat to global security? The sufficient and unhindered access to cheap energy resources is a security concern for governments. Non-renewable energy sources such as fossil fuels often guide a nation’s economic wealth and military strength. The access, production, and delivery of this strategic resource drive a government’s policy development and often contains influences that may cause internal conflicts and strain relationships with other external entities

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    INVESTMENT IN SAUDI ARABIA-AN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE Khalid Alkhathlan, Department of Economics, King Saud University, Riyadh, KSA Md.Tarique, College of Business Administration, Al-Kharj, King Saud University, Riyadh, KSA. ABSTRACT Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) plays an important role in stimulating the growth potentials and providing stability to the economy of Saudi Arabia. Our findings show that there are mainly four factors which determine the net FDI flow to Saudi Arabia. These

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    Oil After World War 1.2

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    leading to a brief British-German-Turkish skirmish for control of the pipeline at the start of World War 1.2(Wilfred, 2007) Oil was next found in the Persian Gulf, beginning with Bahrain in 1931; there were subsequent discoveries in Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the Trucial states, and Oman. By 1960 the smaller Gulf states were producing 15 percent of the world 's oil, with another 10 percent or so coming from Iraq and Iran.3(Longrigg, Oil in the Middle East) By 1970 this had risen to 30 percent.4(BP

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    are tradition, traditional social ties on the one hand, and the encounter with the foreign other represented? What are the limitations and potential problems of attempting to write such a work? Elaborate! Abdelrahman Munif, a Jordanian born Saudi novelist, wrote a novel called ‘Cities of Salt’. It is a monumental novel that tells the story of the discovery of oil. Encountering the vicious arrival of the global, political and economic modernity to an unnamed Persian Gulf kingdom is the main

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