In 2011, a group 130 artists, writers and curators decided to boycott the new Guggenheim museum in Abu Dhabi. In a petition signed by them, they demanded that the Guggenheim foundation and its developers
take stronger actions to protect the rights of the workers building the 450,000 sq-ft, 200-million dollar project. The bold new Frank Gehry designed building is
poised to rise from the beaches of Sadiyat Island (itself a 27 billion dollar project), off the coast of Abu Dhabi.
All across
the Middle East and in the UAE in particular, massive multimillion dollar
development projects are springing out of the desert sands. Global investors,
seeing opportunity in these tax-free, oil-rich states are quick to seize the
opportunity to gain a petro-dollar or two. In neighboring Dubai, obscenely
expensive construction projects take shape overnight and the mantra seems to
be: All that’s glitters… can be built in Dubai.
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| Have oil, will build..anything: The Guggenheim Abu Dhabi |
Abu Dhabi on the other hand, always the quieter elder sibling of Dubai, has taken to the
world stage in a different way- it has positioned itself to become the cultural capital of the region as
opposed to Dubai’s glitz and glamor. In this endeavor, Abu Dhabi has
brought to the region big name brands in the arts such as the Guggenheim and
the Louvre. Millions of dollars have been spent on wooing the art world and Pritzker winning architects like Gehry.
What they weren’t
counting on however, was the art itself.
The art world thrives on exploration of new ideas. Where once art’s sole
duty was to be undutiful, today it champions causes and breaks boundaries- it
strives for purpose. In Abu Dhabi, a suitable cause to fight for wasn’t hard to find.
Behind the
shimmering glass facades and steel megaliths rising up from the desert, is the
work of armies of migrant laborers. Hundreds of thousands of people from the
developing world, countries like India, Bangladesh, the Philippines, Indonesia,
come to the Middle East in search of better jobs. Many end up in the construction sector,
others in domestic work, commercial and technical services. And many are
exploited and abused with little or no rights.
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| Heigh ho and off to work we go: Migrant construction workers line up for the bus back to camp (constructionweek.com) |
The post-oil boom Middle East in
general has a very poor track record in human rights. Racism and social
stratification are rampant and migrant workers occupy the lowest rungs. Workers
live in squalid camps on the outskirts of cities and are bussed to work sites
every day. The threat of deportation is used to keep them in check and workers
are often denied pay, overtime, time off and other benefits. Elsewhere in the
cities, female migrants work as domestics and nannies, often abused and unpaid.
Like the slaves who built the pyramids, armies of labour are building the
modern day monuments of the Middle East.
But in the theater
of global economics, these Arab states suddenly find themselves dependent on
other countries. Tourism, free trade and construction are major income
generators here and to attract educated foreigners to come play in the sands,
an marketable image of safety, security and freedom are necessary. The same
forces that brought wealth to the region and now starting to exact reform. Globalization
giveth and globalization demandeth.
And so, when
the art world began to see how their museums were being built, it provoked a
sharp outrage as with the artists’ boycott of the Guggenheim. A very
interesting situation then arises. Can foreign developers, artists, planners
and architects bring about change in the human rights regime in these places? Can
globalization inadvertently foster the birth of freedom and democracy? Can there be such a thing as “activist
investment”?
Many of the world’s
top financial players ranging from chain-stores to investment firms have an
interest in the region. And many of them are obliged to follow ethics and laws
of their own countries. Wouldn’t it be antithetical to have IKEA- a company built
on the premise of Scandinavia’s liberal workers’ rights and laws- build a store
using mistreated labor? Or the Louvre- an institution that celebrates freedom
of thought and expression- set up shop in a land of censorship and media
control? But they do! And through the open door of globalization they have an opportunity
to build a constructive dialogue and implement change.
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| The road to equal rights? |
In the case
of the Guggenheim, the artists succeeded in drawing attention to their cause.
The Abu Dhabi government found itself putting on a brave face to the world as
it quickly drew up a new charter of workers’ rights. Other investors and developers were quick to
follow. The Guggenheim, the Louvre, New York University (NYU) and others along
with their developers began including worker remuneration, living conditions, and
treatment into their agreements and contracts. Cornell University has found itself asking the same questions in Doha, Qatar. A Human Rights Watch report on
Abu Dhabi from this year shows marked improvement in worker treatment including better housing and compensation.
The
implications for financial institutions’ commitment to equity or even the
education of planners and architects in our globalized world, is huge. The Middle East is highly dependent on outside
expertise and they have the money to afford it. Equity can potentially begin
before the project even gets off the drawing board. After all, the structures
of inequality are designed and built by professionals like us- laborers work on
our designs, workers camps and servant quarters are designed by us, city legislation and plans are drawn up by us. This is another new face of the global
equity movement-where freedom is championed by the power of the contract than
by rule of force.
Abu Dhabi with
its history is still far more humane in its treatment of
migrants than some of its other regional neighbors. However, there is still a
long way to go to achieve social equality here. A sense of graduated citizenship
still runs strong and skin color and ethnic background are still an important
determinant of social status. But we’ve just turned the page on what should be
a very interesting chapter for the region.








