Michael Herb (born October 7, 1966) is an American political scientist who gained prominence through his thesis of Arab monarchies.
Herb graduated from University of Washington in 1987, earned his master's degree from UCLA in 1992, and completed his doctorate at UCLA in 1997. He joined the faculty of the Georgia State Political Science Department in 1998.
On his website, Dr. Herb manages a database on key political figures of Kuwaiti politics.
In 1999, Herb published . The book's central thesis is that the main reason for the resilience of Arab monarchies is not oil wealth or the lack of a middle class, but because numerous members of the royal family hold key positions in government. The book has become a regularly cited piece in the comparative politics literature of democratization, authoritarianism, and rentier states.
In 2014, Herb published , an analysis of Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, both oil abundant states, have ended up on different ends of the spectrum regarding the concentration of political power. Some of Herb's findings have concluded that the role of the danger of an invasion from Iraq have had significant influence on the speed and to the extent that the Kuwaiti elites were willing to compromise political decision making power to civilians. The book has been nominated as "one of the best Middle East politics books of 2014" by the Washington Post's political blog, Monkey Cage.