Amid a tide of extremism, a mutual embrace that will protect both Turkey and Europe 23 février 2015
Posted by Acturca in EU / UE, France, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.Tags: Islamophobia, Sinan Ülgen
1 comment so far
Financial Times (USA Ed) February 23, 2015, p. 9
By Sinan Ulgen *
Will rising Islamophobia in Europe provide Turkey with its entry ticket to the EU? Recep Tayyip Erdogan seems to think so. And the president of Turkey may be right – but for the wrong reasons. (suite…)
Acturca Journal Watch September 2012 30 septembre 2012
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
add a comment
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…)
Acturca Journal Watch May 2012 31 mai 2012
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
add a comment
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.
Acturca Journal Watch August 2011 31 août 2011
Posted by Acturca in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Books / Livres, Caucasus / Caucase, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, EU / UE, History / Histoire, Immigration, Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, Russia / Russie, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.Tags: Abir M.A. al-Ghandour, Acturca Journal Watch, Ahmet İçduygu, AKP, Alevi Islam, Alexander M. Danzer, Ali Çarkoğlu, Altay Atlı, American Ethnologist, Andreas S. Andreou, armement, Ayhan Kaya, Aylin Yardımcı, Aytuğ Şaşmaz, Ödül Celep, Özgehan Şenyuva, Balkans, Bedrudin Brljavac, Berlin, Bernard Steunenberg, Black Sea, Book Review, Boğaç A. Ergene, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Caucasus, Cenk Sidar, China, CHP, Christiane Rüth, Cigdem Kentmen, Coercive diplomacy, Copenhagen School, Cyprus, Damla Aras, Defence and Peace Economics, Democratisation, Democratization, diplomacy, Ebru Ş. Canan-Sokullu, ECHR, Eldar Mamedov, Emel Parlar Dal, EU, EU / UE, EU enlargement, EU membership, European Neighborhood Policy, European Review of Economic History, European Review of History, Euroscepticism, F. Stephen Larrabee, Gamze Avcı, Gareth Winrow, Gülistan Gürbey, George A. Zombanakis, George Kyris, Georgia, Germany, Gonul Tol, Greece, History / Histoire, Hulya Ulku, Human Relations, ihan Köseleci Blanchy, immigrants, intégration, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Iran, Iraq, Islam, Islamophobia, Istanbul, Ivane Chkhikvadze, Işık Gürleyen, Journal of International Migration and Integration, Kabir Tambar, Kastamonu, Kurds, Kyklos, Leonard Hammer, Markus Ketola, Metin Coşgel, MHP, Middle East, Middle East Studies Online Journal, Miroslav Šedivý, Mona Hassan, Murat Metin Hakki, Mustafa Bilgehan Öztürk, nationalism, Nazan Maksudya, neoliberalism, NGO, Nigar Göksel, Nihan Köseleci Blanchy, Ottoman Empire, Outre-Terre, Paul Kubicek, periphery, Pinar Bilgin, Pinar Derin‐Güre, political Islam, Revue européenne d'histoire, ritual, Russia, Russia / Russie, Sait Akşit, Security Dialogue, Semin Suvarierol, Senem Aydın Düzgit, Shi‘i Islam, Simay Petek, South European Society and Politics, Stefan Füle, Survival, Syria, terrorism, The International Journal of Human Rights, Turkey, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU, Turkish Policy Quarterly, Viktor Makarov, William Hale, Yunus Yılmaz, Zeynep Sezgin, İnan İzci
add a comment
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, August 2011
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…)
Turkish women, west German feminists, and the gendered discourse on Muslim cultural difference 24 mai 2011
Posted by Acturca in EU / UE, Immigration, Religion, Turkey / Turquie.Tags: EU / UE, Federal Republic of Germany, Germany, immigrants, Islamophobia, Necla Kelek, Rita Chin, Susanne von Paczensky, Turkey / Turquie, women
add a comment
Springerin, Band 17, Heft 2 (Frühjahr 2011) Deutsch
Rita Chin
Islamophobia has become the « defining mental state of the new Europe », concentrated mainly in the image of the female Muslim immigrant. In a discourse mainly driven by feminists, writes Rita Chin, what began as the expression of concern for Turkish women and their problems in West German society became the articulation of boundaries between East and West, between feminist praxis and unreformed patriarchy. (suite…)