Posted by Acturca in Immigration, Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Austria, Islam
Deutsche Presse-Agentur (DPA) Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Vienna
A majority of Austrian parliamentarians are expected to pass a divisive bill on Wednesday that aims to curb foreign influence on local Muslims. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Islam, Zafer Şenocak
Le Monde (France) mardi 20 janvier 2015, p. 12
Débats ~ Un islam à réformer?
Par Zafer Şenocak *
Le débat intellectuel sur l’islam brille par son indigence. Il faut renouveler l’étude des textes traditionnels de la foi islamique en les confrontant au monde contemporain. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in EU / UE, Immigration, Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Bertelsmann Stiftung, Dirk Halm, Germany, Islam, Kai Hafez, Martina Sauer, Religion Monitor, Richard Traunmüller, Sabrina Schmidt
Religion Monitor (Bertelsmann Stiftung) January 2015 Deutsch
Dirk Halm, Martina Sauer, Kai Hafez, Sabrina Schmidt, Richard Traunmüller *
Most of the four million Muslims living in Germany are part of the country’s social fabric. Their attitudes and viewpoints very much reflect the Federal Republic’s basic values, such as a belief in democracy and diversity. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: AKP, alévis, chrétiens, Irak, Islam, Pape François, réfugiés, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, soufisme, Vatican
Le Figaro (France) no. 21869, vendredi 28 novembre 2014, p. 10
Jean-Marie Guénois, Envoyé spécial à Ankara
François, qui arrive vendredi à Ankara avant de se rendre à Istanbul, rencontrera des réfugiés venus d’Irak. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Books / Livres, Central Asia / Asie Centrale, France, Immigration, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: État islamique en Irak et au Levant (EIIL), Daech, Islam, Jean-Louis Schlegel, laïcité, Olivier Roy
Pèlerin (France) no. 6883, jeudi 30 octobre 2014, p. 4-7
Sophie Laurant
Philosophe, sociologue, ce spécialiste de l’islam politique a débuté sa carrière en apprenant les langues orientales et en voyageant dans les montagnes afghanes. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: AKP, Diyanet, Erkan Toguslu, Fethullah Gülen, Gulen, Islam, Recep Tayyip Erdogan
La Croix (France) no. 39781, samedi 11 janvier 2014, p. 13
Erkan Toguslu *, Recueilli par Anne-Bénédicte Hoffner
Le chercheur Erkan Toguslu explique les racines du conflit qui oppose actuellement en Turquie le gouvernement islamo-conservateur mené par Tayyip Recep Erdogan et le mouvement Gülen, très présent dans le monde scolaire, les médias, etc. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Dani Rodrik, démocratie, Islam
La Tribune (France), no. 5257, 19 août 2013, p. 142-144 English Español
Dani Rodrik
L’islam est-il fondamentalement incompatible avec la démocratie? De nombreux événements nous amènent à nous poser la question. Mais c’est une question qui obscurcit les choses, plutôt que de les éclairer, estime Dani Rodrik, professeur d’économie politique internationale à l’université de Harvard, et auteur de « The Globalization Paradox: Democracy and the Future of the World Economy ». (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: AKP, Islam, Kemal Dervis, protests, Turkey
Financial Times (UK) Monday, June 10, 2013, p. 9
By Kemal Dervis *
After turmoil erupted in the Arab world in 2011, a number of western analysts argued that « the Turkish model » could be an example for other majority Muslim countries. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Can Kasapoglu, Islam, Turkey
The Jerusalem Post (Israel) April 3, 2013, p. 13
By Can Kasapoglu *
A Turkish academic asks what the two countries should do next Following the early signs of rapprochement between Turkey and Israel, analysts on both sides focused on why and how this was happening. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Ataturk, History, Islam, secular, Turkey
The Irish Times, Thursday, February 14, 2013, p. 14 Türkçe
David Adams
Each morning, as dawn breaks, one awakens to the sound of the first Islamic call to prayer. The muezzin’s voice, beautifully atmospheric as it echoes and resonates about the town, will be heard another four times before midnight. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Islam, sex, Turkey
The Economist (UK) no. 950
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Even for imams, discussing sex is no longer taboo. Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, believes that one of the keys to prosperity is a young population. He would love to ban abortion and he nags families to have at least three children. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in France, Immigration, Religion.
Tags: imam, Islam, mosquée, Sens
L’Yonne républicaine (France) mardi 18 décembre 2012, p. Nord-07
Cindy Bonnaud
À la rencontre des imams de la mosquée maghrébine et de la mosquée turque de Sens. Les deux mosquées de Sens ont chacune un imam. Ils guident leurs fidèles dans leur quête religieuse. Mais pas seulement. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Art-Culture, History / Histoire, Religion, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Ahmed Dogan, Balkans, book, Bulgaria, EU membership, History, Ibrahim Karahasan-Chynar, interview, Islam, Movement for Rights and Freedoms, Ottoman Empire, Roxolana, soap opera, Turkey, Turkey-EU, Turkish minority
Novinite.com (Bulgaria) October 11, 2012, Thursday
Maria Guineva
Neighboring Turkey has always caused fierce debates in Bulgaria on the 500 years of Ottoman rule, on the interpretation of historical facts, on the Communist regime’s Revival Process to replace the names of Bulgarian Muslims with Christian ones (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Art-Culture, Economy / Economie, Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: Ahmet Insel, Ankara, démocratie, Diyarbakir, documentaire, Egemen Bagis, Elif Safak, Gaziantep, Islam, Kilis, laïcité, Nuray Mert, PKK, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Syrie, Université technique du Moyen-Orient
ARTE (France-Allemagne) mardi 9 octobre 2012 à 22:40 Deutsch
Documentaire de Baudouin Koenig avec Daniel Leconte et Fabrice Gardel
L’islam turc est-il soluble dans la démocratie ? Les équipes de « I love democracy » ont sillonné le pays pour sonder un modèle républicain envié mais non exempt de dérives autoritaires, et prendre le pouls d’une société civile pleine de vitalité. (suite…)
Posted by mkocabozdogan in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Art-Culture, Books / Livres, Caucasus / Caucase, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, EU / UE, France, History / Histoire, Immigration, Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Academic Journal, Acturca Journal Watch, Adem Y. Elveren, Agata S Nalborczyk, Agnes Nicolescu, Ahmed Rüstem Bey, Ahmet Baran Dural, AKP, Alisher Akhmedjonov, Alper Yilmaz Dede, Alternatives Internationales, Ankara, Anti-Communism, Anti-Muslim Sentiment, Antipode, Applied Economics Letter, Applied Economics Letters, Arab Spring, Armenians, Avi Rubin, Aylin Ege, Ayşe Tekdal Fildis, Azerbaijan, Bahar Tanyas, Balkan, Balkans, Belgium, Bengi Akbulut, Birol A. Yeşilada, Book Review, Book Reviews, Burak Gümüş, Burcu Egilmez, Cambridge Journal of Economics, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Central Bank, Ceren Soylu, CHP, Cigdem V. Sirin, Cold War, Conflict Groups, constitutional review, Cooperation, crime, CTAD: Journal of Modern Turkish History Studies, Cyprus, David Judson, Democratization, Derya Güngör, Development and Change, Doğan Gurpinar, Eastern Anatolia, Ece Özlem Atikcan, Economic Development, economic growth, elections, Enthusiastic Reformers, environmental policy, Environmental problems, EU, Europe, Europeanization, Eyüp Özveren, Farrukh Suvankulov, Fatma Ogucu, foreign policy, Fransje Smits, Gökhan Bacik, Günay Akel, George Kyris, Giray Sadik, Global Perspective, Greece, Guzin Erlat, Guzin Erlat & Haluk Erlat, Hakan Mehmet Kiriş, Historian, Ibrahim Örnek, identity, Ideological Commitments, Ilke Civelekoglu, immigrants, institutional evolution, Institutions, International Journal of Behavioral Development, International Journal of Conflict Management, International Labor and Working-Class History, International Political Science Review, International Review of Applied Economics, International Sociology, intra-industry trade, Islam, Islamic reflexivity, Islamism, Islamophobia, Ismael Montana, Israël, Istanbul, James P. Krokar, Journal of Developing Societies, Journal of Historical Sociology, Journal of Modern Turkish History Studies, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Journal of Youth Studies, judicial activism, Kabir Tambar, Karen Phalet, Kate Elizabeth Creasey, Kemal H. Karpat, Kemal Kirişci, Kerem Öge, Korean war, Kurdish rebellions, Law & Social Inquiry, liberal democracy, liberal rights, M. Erdem Kabadayi, Marc H. Bornstein, Mehmet Orhan, Melinda Negrón-Gonzales, Meltem Yılmaz Şener, Michael B. Bishku, Middle East, Middle East Policy, Middle Eastern Studies, Modern Turkey, modernity, multi-vector policy, Mustafa Aksakal, Muzaffer Ercan Yilmaz, Nathalie Tocci, Nationalities Papers, Natural resource management, Negotiation decision making, neoliberal, Netherlands, occidentalism, Orientalism, Ottoman Empire, Ottoman judical reform, Ottoman Mediterranean, Participatory decision making, Paul Kubicek, pay inequality, policy, political Islam, political parties, Political Research Quarterly, political violence, Power, référendum, regional actors, relations internationales, Religious, religious parties, Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, renewable energy, Rival Ideologies, Roma, Romanian Journal of European Affairs, Sabri Ciftci, secularism, Selahattin Murat Sirina, Selin Efsan Nas, Sevinç Tekindor von zur Mühlen, Sezai Ozan Zeybek, social construction, Societies, Sociological and Organizational Structures, sociology of religion, state, Sudan, Sultan Tepe, Sustainability, Syed Tanvir Wasti, Syria, Takvor H. Mutafoglu, Türkay S.Nefes, The Journal of Historical Sociology, the United Kingdom, Theoretical Perspective, trade pattern, transformation, Turkey, Turkish academics, Turkish Cypriot, Turkish diaspora, turkish labor history, Turkish migrants, Turkish press, Turkish studies, Turks, UK, Virginia H. Aksan, World Bank, Yann Mens, Yasushi Hazama, Yücel Yilmaz, Zaur Gasimov
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, September 2012
Compiled by Ozan Yigitkeskin
Acturca Journal Watch monitors leading scholarly journals for articles of particular interest to scholars of diplomacy, foreign relations, and international history on Turkey. It is updated monthly. (suite…)
Posted by mkocabozdogan in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Art-Culture, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, EU / UE, France, History / Histoire, Immigration, Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: Acturca Journal Watch, Ahmet İçduygu, Ali Bilgiç, Ali Burak Güven, All Azimuth, All Azimuth: Journal of Foreign Policy and Peace, Amanda Paul, Andrew Mango, Ankara, Arab Spring, Asian Affairs, Australian Economic History Review, Ayse Zarakol, Azerbaijani minority, Azuolas Bagdonas, Çağdaş Üngör, Balkan minorities, banking regulation, Başak Bilecen Süoğlu, Bülent Aras, Beken Saatçioğlu, Bianca Kaiser, Bill Park, Bo Ærenlund Sørensen, boundary objects, Brent E. Sasley, Bruce Clark, Burcay Erus, Burcu Yakut-Cakar, Camilla Trud Nereid, Can M. Aybek, capital city, Cengiz Aktar, Central and Eastern Europe, China, Cigdem Kentmen, citizenship, Civil-military relations, Cold War, confrontation, cosmopolitan citizenship, cosmopolitanism, Crimes, Current Sociology, Democratization, Deniz Sert, Deniz Yükseker, Development Policy Review, Dilek Torunoglu, domestication, Duncan McCargo, Economic Development, Emigration from Turkey to Germany, EU, EU membership, European History Quarterly, European integration, European Union, F. Asli Ergul, Faiza Ali, Ferda Halicioglu, Fikret Adaman, foreign policy, Foreign Policy Analysis, gender, gender equality, German citizens, Germany, Giray Gozgor, government debt, Greece, Greek Historiography, Hande Paker, Hüseyin Al, Healthcare reform, identity politics, IMF, immigration policy, Inci Basa, Income, income distribution, Insight Turkey, intégration, International Journal of Economics and Finance, International Journal of Social Economics, International student mobility, Iran, irregular migration, Islam, Israël, Jawad Syed, Journal of Advanced Social Research, Journal of Contemporary History, Journal of democracy, Journal of European Social Policy, Journal of Urban History, Karen Kaya, labour, labour recruitment agreement, Lithuania, Local governments, marketization, Mehdi Solhi, Mexico-US migration, Middle East, Middle Eastern Studies, migration, migration and development, Military Review, minimum income, minority, modernity, Muslim, Muslims, Mustafa F. Özbilgin, natural rate of unemployment, New Foreign Policy, new public management, Nora Fisher Onar, Omid Shokri Kalehsar, Onur Gökçe, Ortadoğu Etütleri, Ottoman Empire, Ottoman Identity, Oğuzhan Göksel, Pakistan, participation, Perceptions, Philip Martin, Pinar Bilgin, Political culture, population, post-colonialism, poverty, public opinion, Radio Peking, regional unemployment, religion, Review of European Studies, Rum, Ruth Kark, secularism, Segah Sak, Serdar Ş. Güner, Seth J. Frantzman, social assistance, Space and Place, Stefanos Katsikas, Sule Toktas, Temporal causality, Thailand, Theory and Society, Threat perceptions, Time series analysis, transit migration, Transnationalism, Tuba Agartan, Turkey, Turkey-EU, Turkey-EU migration, Turkish economy, Turkish immigrants, Turkish Media, Turkish press, Turkish press and the West, Turkish-Israeli relations, unification, Universal rights, universalism, urban formation, US, Women’s activism, Work & Organization, World Bank, Yedigün, Ziya Öniş
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, July 2012
Compiled by Ozan Yigitkeskin
Acturca Journal Watch monitors leading scholarly journals for articles of particular interest to scholars of diplomacy, foreign relations, and international history on Turkey. It is updated monthly.
(suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Caucasus / Caucase, Central Asia / Asie Centrale, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Russia / Russie, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Communauté des États indépendants, Géorgie, Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, Iran, Islam, Kazakhstan, Organisation du traité de sécurité collective, Ouzbékistan, Syrie
Le Figaro (France) no. 21136, lundi 16 juillet 2012, p. 23
Hélène Carrère d’Encausse, de l’Académie française
Pour l’historienne, le soutien de Vladimir Poutine à la Syrie s’explique par sa perte d’influence en Asie centrale, au bénéfice des États-Unis. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Religion, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Ajvatovica, Balkans, Bosnie-Herzégovine, Islam, pèlerinage, Prusac
La Croix (France) no. 39312, mercredi 27 juin 2012, p. 19
Sophie Guesne, Prusac (Bosnie), de notre correspondante
Des milliers de musulmans de Bosnie se sont retrouvés le week-end dernier à Prusac, en Bosnie centrale, pour leur pèlerinage annuel, le « plus grand » en Europe selon les organisateurs. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Art-Culture, Religion, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Fazil Say, freedom of expression, Islam, social media, Turkey, Twitter
The New York Times (USA) June 2, 2012, p. A 4
By Sebnem Arsu and Daniel J. Wakin
A court here on Friday charged Fazil Say, a classical and jazz pianist with an international career, with insulting Islamic values in Twitter messages, the latest in a series of legal actions against Turkish artists, writers and intellectuals for statements they have made about religion and Turkish national identity. (suite…)
Posted by mkocabozdogan in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Art-Culture, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, EU / UE, France, History / Histoire, Immigration, Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Aaron Stein, Acturca Journal Watch, Africa, AKP, America, Andrew Mango, Arab Spring, Ariana Ferentinou, Arif Dirlik, Asli Tunç, Ayhan Erol, Ayhan Kaya, Ayse Bugra, Banu Eligür, Ben Lombardi, Biray Kolluoglu, Bulgaria, bureaucratic authority, bureaucratic field, Canada, Caroline E. Arnold, Christine Ogan, Christopher Phillips, Cihan Tuğal, clientelism, cointegration, Cold War, collective action, colonialism, conservative democracy, cosmopolitan (re)formations, cosmopolitanism, Critical constructivism, democracy, Democratic Islamization, diplomacy, E. Fuat Keyman, Economic and Industrial Democracy, Egypt, Elif M. Babül, Emile Hokayem, empirical study, entrepreneurialism, Erdogan Government, Etatism, Ethnic and Racial Studies, ethnic politics, Europe-Turkey relations, European Review, European Union, F. Michael Wuthrich, Ferhunde Özbay, Flanders, Frederic C. Shorter, Germany, good governance, government, Government-business relations, governmental legitimacy, governmental strategy, Greek identity, Green Movement, Gul Inanc, Gunnur Kocar, Haldun Çancı, Henrike Donner, human rights, identity, identity politics, India, industrial relations, Industrialization, institutionalism, Interactions: Studies in Communication & Culture, International Journal of Energy Research, interpersonal conflict, Ipek Demir, Iran, Islam, Islamic Mediation, Islamism, Islamophobia, Israël, Istanbul, James Dawson, Javier Auyero, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, Journal of Management Studies, Juncture - Public Policy Research, Juris Pupcenoks, Kürşad Ertuğrul, Kemalism, Kurdish, Kurdish Diaspora's Engagement, Labour Forces, laicism, lead markets, leadership, Leadership and Organization Development Journal, Leen d'Haenens, managerial discretion, média, médiation, mediated society, Melih Soner Celiktas, microfinance, Middle class, Middle Eastern Studies, migration, Migration Letters, Military-Media Relations, Minorities, Miyase Christensen, modernity, multiculturalist, Muslims, Mustafa Serdar Palabıyık, Nationalities Papers, Negotiation and Conflict Management Research, neo-conservatism, Neoliberal Era, neoliberalism, Netherlands, New Perspectives on Turkey, non-ethnic politics, NPT, Nurcay Turkoglu, online social media, Orientalism, Ottoman Empire, Pakistan, Palestine, Palestine's Southern Coast, Partnership to Enmity, paternalistic leadership, Philipp C. Bleek, Philosophy & Social Criticism, PKK, PKK Revolt, PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, political economy, political ethnography, political Islam, polities, Post-Arab Spring Muslim World, Public Policy Research, Race, recognition, Regional Cooperation, regional identity, regionalism, republicanism, Rum Polites, Rural Population, securitization, Servant leadership, Social capital, social democracy, subjectivity, Suhnaz Yilmaz, Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, Syria, Talha Köse, Taner Akan, technology, technology foresight, The Levantine Review, The Middle East Journal, Toronto Alevi Community, Transnationalism, Turkey, Turkey's Syria problem, Turkish, Turkish business, Turkish diaspora, Turkish migration to Germany, Turkish Politics, Turkish reality television, Turkish women migrants, Ulema, Urban Classes, urban space, voluntary business organizations, wind energy, workers, Yuval Ben-Bassat, Zeynep Hale Öner, Şükrü Özen, Şule Akkoyunlu
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, May 2012
Compiled by Ozan Yigitkeskin
Acturca Journal Watch monitors leading scholarly journals for articles of particular interest to scholars of diplomacy, foreign relations, and international history on Turkey. It is updated monthly.
(suite…)