International Colony Kurdistan


Book Description

Ismail Besikci is a renown Turkish sociologist who specializes on Kurds in south-eastern Turkey. He has authored several important works on Kurdish social organization and the continuing plight of Kurds today. He has also been imprisoned in Turkey most of his adult life because he has spoken out on the Kurdish issue. Be?ikci argues that the Turkish state has been practicing a policy of genocide against Kurds over the past 80 years.International Colony Kurdistan is probably Besikci's most open critique of the present division of Kurdistan, an ethnically contigious area (mainly) between Turkey, Iran and Iraq - with a Kurdish population of over 20 million people. Be?ikci argues that, for all their political differences, there is a longstanding understanding between these regional states to deny Kurds the right of self-determination and nationhood.Ismail Besikci's International Colony Kurdistan was originally published in 1991 and led to the imprisonment of the author in Turkey. The book remains a roadmap for our understanding of Kurdistan today.




Kurdistan


Book Description




Kurdistan and the Kurds Under the Syrian Occupation


Book Description

Since the end of World War I, the Kurds have had no national rights, and their country Kurdistan was divided and occupied by Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Syria and former Soviet Union as an international colony, and the Kurds have been prosecuted, massacred, assimilated and denied the very basic human rights. Whether the Kurds are demanding full independence or a more limited autonomy or extension of electricity for their villages, in these States the Kurdish people face severe restrictions and harsh oppression. Here is some of what happened to western Kurdistan as an example to the rest of Kurdistan.




In Search of Kurdistan


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Explaining history, geography, and political economy of Kurdistan.




Kurdistan


Book Description




Mapping Kurdistan


Book Description

Examines how the idea of Kurdistan, as a homeland and a source of national identity, was created within international political history.




Towards an Independent Kurdistan: Self-Determination in International Law


Book Description

Kurdistan is among the world’s most notorious cases of self-determination denied, and the reasons why this outcome remains unachieved reveal as much about the biases of international law as they do about the merits of the case for Kurdistan. On the centenary of the Treaty of Lausanne, 24 July 1923, the last of the international instruments establishing the new international order after World War I, this book explores the potential blind spots of international law regarding its differential application in the Middle East. Tracing self-determination over the past century, the work explores how the law applies to Kurdish aspirations and to what extent the Kurds can rely upon the current law of self-determination to achieve internationally recognised statehood. The book offers an exhaustive historico-legal analysis of changing international legal concepts and geopolitical upheaval, providing a blueprint for Kurdish selfdetermination in international law. Shedding light on the law’s structural biases, it represents a comprehensive historico-legal account of Kurdish aspirations for territorial independence within international law literature, offering a guide to relevant legal problems. It will be of interest to students and academics focused on international law, specifically, peoplehood, statehood, secession, human rights law, political science, and anthropology. Moreover, policymakers, government officials working in peace and conflict, research and advocacy institutes, think tanks, as well as scholars of international relations, historians, political scientists, regional specialists, diplomats, and non-governmental organisation activists will find it a useful reference. The book also illuminates the human rights status of the Kurds in their host states, making it relevant to scholars and activists. Its findings have implications extending beyond Kurdistan to self-determination struggles in Scotland, Catalonia, Ukraine, and elsewhere.




In Search of Kurdistan Vol. 1


Book Description

history, geography, and the political economy of control of this place of Terra Incognita. It is about the facts of what is controlled by whom, for whom, and why. It is a sad story with a happy ending of the world's largest nation without a country. Having a population of 47 million, as the indigenous people in the Middle East, the Kurds have no friends but the mountains, caves, rivers, fertile farms, and valleys. With unlimited support from the Western colonial powers, four parts of Greater Kurdistan have been occupied by Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria. They forced ecocide, genocide,and ethnocide on the Kurds. As a stateless nation, the Kurds have survived and are a great game-changer in the region. With the power of resources such as Geo-Petro-Hydro-Demo, after a century of bloody and brutal oppression, the Kurds tell their story of successful survival. The Kurds are confident in implementing smart diplomacy, a road map to democratic autonomy of self-rule, and a peaceful solution to their predicaments.




Social Work at the Level of International Comparison


Book Description

The book presents a theoretical and practical approach to international social work. It uses examples from Germany with a long tradition of social work and focuses on the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, which is in a pioneering phase in teaching social work while at the same time experiencing a highly explosive situation in global politics. Socio-political challenges such as violence, traumatization, (religious) fundamentalism, ethnicization, changing gender relations, flight and migration call for a professional examination of social work as a human rights profession in international comparison.