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The Kurds in the Middle East: enduring problems and new dynamics / edited by Mehmet Gurses, David Romano, and Michael M. Gunter. — 1 online resource. — (Kurdish societies, politics, and international relations). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/2570283.pdf>.Дата создания записи: 15.04.2020 Тематика: Kurds — Politics and government; Politics and government. Коллекции: EBSCO Разрешенные действия: –
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Аннотация
"In light of the changes that the Kurds and the countries in the Middle East are undergoing, The Kurds in the Middle East: Enduring Problems and New Dynamics provides a comprehensive analysis of the Kurdish-state relations in the four key Middle Eastern countries"--.
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Оглавление
- Cover
- The Kurds in the Middle East
- Series page
- The Kurds in the Middle East: Enduring Problems and New Dynamics
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Section I: Continuity and Change in Turkey’s Kurdish Question
- Chapter 1
- Kurdish Political Representation in Turkey
- Kurdish Descriptive Representation through the Center-Right Turkish Political Parties
- The Rise of the Pro-Kurdish Democratic Movement
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 2
- Kurdish Public Opinion in Turkey
- Framing Kurds and Kurdish Conflict
- From Broken Promises to Denial
- Recognition with a Stick
- AKP Era: Hope and Hopelessness
- The Kurdish Street and Cultural and Political Rights
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 3
- The Political Economy of Turkey’s Kurdish Question
- The Deformation of Ottoman Kurdistan and Bordering Regions: De-development in ESA from the First World War until the 1980 Coup (1914–1980)
- The Armenian Genocide of 1915 and the Forced Deportation of Ottoman Kurds in 1916: An Economic Catastrophe
- Society, Economics and Politics in the Republican People’s Party Era (1923–1950): Consolidation of the “National Economy” and the “Reform” of the East (1923–1929)
- The Great Depression, the Second World War, and the End of the Republican Era (1929–1950)
- Transition to a Turbulent Democracy and “Incorporation” of ESA (1950–1980)
- Incorporation of the Kurdish Elite
- Agriculture-Led Growth
- Crisis of Agriculture-Led Growth
- Systematic Denial of the Kurds
- Restoration of the Status Quo Ante and the Failed Promise of Land Reform
- Intensification of Regional Inequalities and Massive Underdevelopment of the Kurdish Region
- Derisory Public and Private Investment
- Unbalanced Sectoral Distribution of Public Investment
- Stunted Industrial and Agricultural Development
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Section II: Continuity and Change in Syria
- Chapter 4
- The Evolution of Rojava
- Variations of Rojava
- Tools of State-building: War, Education, and Maps
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 5
- Non-State Actors and Governance
- Syrian State and the Kurds: Invisible People
- From Rebellion to the Reappropriation of State Power
- Constructing Non-State Governance
- Administration
- Security: Justice, Military, and Police
- Legitimization
- Diplomacy and War in Rojava
- Conclusion: Feasibility and Challenges
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 6
- Continuity and Change in Syrian Kurdistan
- Background
- The Revolution in Rojava
- Foreign Relations of Rojava: Curse or Opportunity?
- Syrian Opposition, the Kurds, and the Assad Regime
- Conclusion: Prospects for Rojava
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 7
- Evolution of Kurdish-Led Administrations in Northern Syria
- The Rojava Revolution and West Kurdistan
- From the Rojava System to Federalism
- New North and East Syria Administration
- Concluding Remarks
- Notes
- References
- Section III: Continuity and Change in Iraq-Kurdish Relations
- Chapter 8
- The Kurdish Question
- Pre-WWI History: Kurds in the Ottoman Empire
- The Kurdish Question in Iraq
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 9
- Making Sense of Iraqi Kurdistan’s Civil War of the 1990s
- The Tortured History of Land Tenure in Iraq Kurdistan
- The Illusive Dream of Land Reform (1958–1983)
- Saddam’s Land Reform by Death and Destruction: The Anfal Campaign in Kurdistan Region
- Ghosts of the Far and Near Past: Kurdistan Agrarian Communities in Post 1991 Gulf War
- On the Definition of Insanity
- Notes
- References
- Section IV: Continuity and Change in Iran–Kurdish Relations
- Chapter 10
- A Contemporary Political History of the Kurds in Iran
- Persian Nation-Building in Iran
- The Establishment of the Republic of Kurdistan in 1946
- The Military Struggle of the 1980s
- The Civil Struggle of the Kurds since 1990
- Changing Political Strategy to Escape another Military Defeat
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 11
- Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou and the Kurdish Resistance in Iran
- Suppression of Kurdish Identity
- Ghassemlou’s Cultural and Political Background
- Political Vision
- The Iranian Revolution
- Adept, Approachable, and Compassionate Leader
- Holy War against the Kurds
- Time for Dialogue
- Relations with Iraqi Regime
- Dialogue with the Islamic Republic
- State Terrorism
- Current Dynamics in Iranian Kurdistan
- Notes
- References
- Section V: Imagining Kurdistan from Abroad
- Chapter 12
- Diaspora Identity, Collective Memory, and Artistic Expression
- Methodology
- Diasporas and Collective Memory
- Kurdistan in Germany
- Envisioning a Kurdish Exhibit in Germany
- Splintered Kurdish Communities in the United States
- Kurdish Activism and Art in the United States
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 13
- Diasporic Narratives of Assimilation and Resistance
- Crafting National Sameness through Assimilation
- Outlawing and Dehumanizing Kurdish Identity
- Internalizing Kurdish Subjugation and Turkish Superiority
- Limits and Possibilities of Diasporic Resistance
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 14
- Return Mobilities of Highly Skilled Young British Kurdish People to Kurdistan
- Methodology and Background Information
- Theoretical Debate on Return Migration and Return Mobilities
- From Displacement to Return Mobilities
- Diasporas and Return Mobilities: The Kurdish Context
- Motivations and a Typology of Return Mobilities
- Access to the Labor Market in the Conflicted Region
- Challenges to Returnees
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgment
- Notes
- References
- Index
- About the Editors and Contributors
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