Posted by Acturca in EU / UE, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: GTE Working Paper, Istituto Affari Internazionali, Kemal Kirişci, Sinan Ekim
GTE Working Paper (Istituto Affari Internazionali) No. 9, April 2015, 13 p.
Kemal Kirişci & Sinan Ekim *
In the course of the last three decades, the Turkish economy experienced a dramatic boom: not only were Turkey’s foreign exports on high demand across the EU and in its immediate neighborhood, but Turkey also attracted high volumes of foreign direct investment. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Economy / Economie, EU / UE, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: Kemal Kirişci, Sinan Ekim, The German Marshall Fund of the United States, Visa Liberalization
German Marshall Fund of the United States, February 13, 2015
By Kemal Kirisci & Sinan Ekim *
Ultimately, the decision to liberalize visas for Turkish nationals is supposed to be merit-based. However, there are concerns that the decision might become politicized. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: CEPS, Kemal Kirişci, readmission agreement
CEPS Commentary, 4 February 2014, 4 pages
Center for European Policy Studies
Kemal Kirişci *
Following a period when EU-Turkish relations have not been particularly close, the readmission agreement signed in December 2013 by the Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom and the Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmet Davutoglu could help inject some sorely needed goodwill and trust into the relationship. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Economy / Economie, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: AKP, Arab Spring, Fethullah Gülen, foreign policy, Kemal Kirişci, Recep Tayyip Erdogan
The Indian Express, December 26, 2013, p. 11
Kemal Kirisci *
A high-profile corruption scandal has aggravated the growing instability in Turkey. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: Bayram Balci, Egypte, Gerard Groc, Gilles Riaux, Institut de Recherche Stratégique de l'École Militaire, Irak, IRSEM, Israël, Jean Marcou, Kemal Kirişci, Pierre Razoux, Syrie, Yohanan Benhaim
Étude de l’IRSEM, n°28, 2013
Gilles Riaux (dir) *
Depuis l’arrivée au pouvoir de l’AKP en 2002, la Turquie a développé une ambitieuse politique étrangère vers le Moyen-Orient, zone autrefois délaissée par Ankara. Elle correspond à une vision stratégique qui place la Turquie à l’articulation de plusieurs espaces géographiques pour démultiplier son action internationale. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: Brookings Doha Center, Brookings Institution, Elif Özmenek Çarmıklı, Elizabeth Ferris, Kemal Kirişci, Osman Bahadır Dinçer, refugees, Sema Karaca, Syria, USAK, Vittoria Federici
Report (Brookings Doha Center Publications) No. 28, Nov 2013 Türkçe
The Brookings Institution and the International Strategic Research Organization (USAK)
By Osman Bahadır Dinçer, Vittoria Federici, Elizabeth Ferris, Sema Karaca, Kemal Kirişci and Elif Özmenek Çarmıklı
On April 29, 2011, the first Syrian refugees crossed the border into Turkey. Two years later, the country hosts some 600,000 Syrian refugees—200,000 of them living in 21 refugee camps with an additional 400,000 living outside of the camps. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in History / Histoire, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie.
Tags: AKP, Bayram Balci, Kemal Kirişci, printemps arabe, Tunisie
Le Figaro (France) no. 21516, mardi 8 octobre 2013, p. 16
Bayram Balci et Kemal Kirisci
Des experts de think-tanks américains* décryptent les raisons de l’affaiblissement du modèle démocratique de la Turquie. En 2011, quand le printemps arabe initié en Tunisie commençait à essaimer, Rached Ghannouchi, le chef de l’opposition tunisienne, président cofondateur du groupe Ennahda, fut l’un des premiers à ériger la Turquie en modèle pour une démocratisation du Moyen-Orient. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Economy / Economie, Turkey / Turquie, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Kemal Kirişci, The Brookings Institution, trade, Turkey, Turkey Project Policy Paper Series, USA
Turkey Project Policy Paper (The Brookings Institution) No. 2, September 2013
Turkey Project Policy Paper Series
By Kemal Kirişci *
In the second Turkey Project Policy Paper, Kemal Kirişci examines the importance of including Turkey in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), arging that it could revitalize Turkey’s place in the transatlantic alliance at a time when Turkey’s neighborhood is in turbulence. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Economy / Economie, Turkey / Turquie, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Barack Obama, bilateral relations, Kemal Kirişci, mémorandum, TAFTA, The Brookings Institution, Transatlantic Free Trade Agreement, Turkey, USA
Memorandum (The Brookings Institution) February 8, 2013
By Kemal Kirişci *
During his second term, President Obama has the opportunity to re-invested in the U.S.-Turkish relationship, focusing on a long-time U.S. ally. Kemal Kirişci wrote this memorandum to President Obama as part of Big Bets and Black Swans: A Presidential Briefing Book. (suite…)
Posted by mkocabozdogan in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Art-Culture, Books / Livres, 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, Aegean crises, Africa, Ahmet Davutoglu, Ahmet Hamdi Akkaya, Alain Servantie, Alexander Bürgin, Algerian War, Alican Tayla, Alternatives Internationales, Anatolian Studies, Ankara, anti-communist, Arab Awakening, Arab Spring, Asli Yazici Yakin, Aviad Rubin, Aylin Özman, économique turc, Bastien Alex, Benjamin Bruce, Borja Martinovic, Burcu Sari Karademir, C. Akca Atac, Cahiers de l'Obtic, Chantal Wright, Cold War, Confluences Méditerranée, Contemporary Politics, Contemporary Security Policy, corruption, Cyprus, Defence and Peace Economics, Defence spending, democracy, Democratization, Didier Billion, discipline, discourse analysis, Diyanet, economic growth, Egemen Bagis, Egypt, Elise Massicard, ethnic conflict, ethnicité, Europe, European Journal of Social Psychology, European Journal of Turkish Studies, European Union, Europeanization, F. Stephen Larrabee, foreign policy, France, Funda Gencoglu, Gerard Groc, Global Policy, Greece, Greece’s socialization strategy, Greek press, Greek-Turkish relations, guérilleros, Hamit Bozarslan, Handan Caglayan, Henri J. Barkey, Hilmi Ozan Ozavci, Hollywood Movies, Human capital, identity politics, Imams, inequality, institutionalization, intégration, Iran, Iranian Nuclearization, Istanbul, Jacques Ould Aoudia, Jean-François Pérouse, Joost Jongerden, Journal of Contemporary European Studies, Journal of Language and Politics, Julia Harte, Kadir Yasin Eryigit, Kemal Dervis, Kemal Kirişci, Kurdish Conflict, Kurdish movement, Kurdistan Workers Party, Kurds, l'Islam, l’armée turque, l’autoritarisme, L’euroscepticisme, les Alévis, liberalism, Marialaura Conte, Marlies Casier, Maykel Verkuyten, Méditerranée, mégapole internationale, Mediterranean, Mehmet Efe Biresselioglu, Michele Brignone, Middle East, Middle East Policy, minorité, modernité, Multilingualism, Murat Yilmaz, Muslim, Mustafa E. Gurbuz, musulmane, NATO, NATO-EU-Turkey trilogy, Nazi, Nursin Atesoglu Guney, Oasis, Ottomans, Pan-Turkism, PKK, Politics, Politics & Society, Politics and Religion, politique, Présidence, Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, projection diplomatique, Radical Democracy, radicalization, regional power, religion, Revue internationale et stratégique, Revue Tiers Monde, Romani, SAIS, Sibel Bali Eryigit, Sinan Ülgen, Sinem Akgul Acikmese, socialisation, sources, South Eastern Europe, Southeast European and Black Sea Studies, stereotype, Structural Breaks, Survival, Syrie, Tarik Oguzlu, Thanos Veremis, TIKA, turcoscepticisme, Turcs, Turkish Language, Turkish Nuclear Security, Turkish studies, Turkish-American alliance, Turkish–Iranian Competition, Turquie, Ufuk Selen, Welfare, Westernization, World Policy Journal, Yasemin Akbaba, YÖK, Zana Çıtak, Zekiye Antakyalioglu, Zeynep Taydas, İştar B. Gözaydın
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, December 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 EU / UE, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: Arab Spring, EU, Euro-Mediterranean Partnership, foreign policy, Istituto Affari Internazionali, Kemal Kirişci, Mediterranean, Syria, Turkey, Union for the Mediterranean, uropean Neighborhood Policy
GTE Working Paper (Istituto Affari Internazionali) No. 1, 6 Nov 2012, 11 p.
by Kemal Kirişci *
Regional integration has long been seen as an effective tool for encouraging regional peace, stability, and prosperity, with the added expectation that economic growth may also facilitate transition to democracy. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE.
Tags: Arab Spring, EU, European Neighborhood Policy, German Marshall Fund of the United States, Istituto Affari Internazionali, Kemal Kirişci, Mediterranean, Turkey, Turkey-EU
Op-Med – Opinions on the Mediterranean, October 2012, 3 p.
German Marshall Fund of the United States – Istituto Affari Internazionali
Kemal Kirişci *
Regional integration has long been seen as an effective tool for encouraging regional peace, stability, and prosperity, with the added expectation that economic growth may also facilitate transition to democracy. (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, Central Asia / Asie Centrale, Economy / Economie, Energy / Energie, EU / UE, Immigration, Istanbul, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Religion, South East Europe / Europe du Sud-Est, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Acturca Journal Watch, Adél Pásztor, Adem Y. Elverena, Ahmet Atakisi, Ahmet Davutoglu, Ahmet T. Kuru, AKP, Alain Servantie, Ali Balci, Ali Bayrakdaroglu, Alican Tayla, Alper Sahin, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, André Freire, Andreas M Wüst, Ankara, Anne Pieter van der Mei, Arab Spring, Asia-Pacific Journal of Financial Studies, Asu Aksoy, autoritarisme, Ayda Eraydin, Ayhan Kaya, Çiğdem Üstün, Özlem Altan-Olcay, Bastien Alex, Bayram Sinkaya, Başak İnce, Beth Ann Fiedler, Bilge Acar Bolat, Bilge Armatlı-Köroğlu, Brigitte Suter, CEO duality, Ceren Lord, Chypre, citizenship, Citizenship Studies, Claes H. De Vreese, Collective Defence, Commission européenne, Communism, Comparative European Politics, Confluences Méditerranée, Corporate governance, customs union, Cyprus, David Tittensor, Defence and Peace Economics, Defence spending, Deniz Ünal, Derya Kelgokmen Ilic, Didier Billion, diplomatie, discrimination, Dynamics of Turkey, eCahiers de l’Institut, economic growth, economie, Education, Electricity reform, Emerging Markets, Empire Ottoman, Energy Policy, energy security, Erdem Basci, Erol Cebeci, Ersan Ersoy, Europe, European Journal of Development Research, European Law Review, European Union, euroscepticisme, FARC, Fatma Lorcu, Feriha Perekli, Firm performance, foreign direct investment, Fulya Apaydin, géostratégie, Gülnur Aybet, geopolitics, Gerard Groc, Global Financial Crisis, Governance tools, Government and Opposition, Grèce, Gulen movement, Hacer Simay Karaalp, Hajo G. Boomgaarden, Hassan Thuillard, Hidayet Tasdoven, identity, ideology, income inequality, Insight Turkey, International Journal of Contemporary Economics and Administrative Sciences, Irak, Iran, irregular migration, Islam, Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations, Islamism, Israël, Istanbul, Izmir, Jean-François Pérouse, Jon Gorvett, Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, Kadir Üstün, Katharina Eisele, Kathrin Bower, Kemal Kirişci, Kurdism, Kılıç Buğra Kanat, L'Union Européenne, Landing, L’Empire Ottoman, Lebanon, Levent Citak, Ludwig Roger, Malte Carlos Hinrichsen, Matériaux pour l’histoire de notre temps, Méditerranée orientale, Michael Minkenberg, Middle East, Migrants, Minorities, Modernisme, monetary policy, Muslim, national identity, nationalism, Nations and Nationalism, NATO, Nazli Ayse Ayyildiz Unnu, Netherlands, New Middle Eastern Studies, Nil Uzun, Nimrod Goren, ordinal regression, organizational structure, Ownership structure, Oxford Review of Education, Perceptions, Pinar Dinç Kenanoğlu, PKK, Political, politique intérieure, proselytism, psychanalyse, Quality & Quantity, Sara Hobolt, secularism, securitization, Security Community, Seda Demiralp, Social capital, social construction, social networks, solidarity, sources économique, Syria, Syrian, terrorism, Terrorism and Political Violence, The German Quarterly, The Journal of Developing Areas, The Middle East, Third World Quarterly, Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie, Topique, transnational organized crime, Tuncay Kardaş, turcoscepticisme, Turkey, Turkish-American Partnership, Turks, Turquie, urban regeneration, urbanisme, Value-based measures, Vener Garayev, Vera Eccarius-Kelly, Worldwide Web, Wouter Van der Brug, İbrahim Arısoy
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, April 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 EU / UE, Middle East / Moyen Orient, Turkey / Turquie, Turkey-EU / Turquie-UE, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Arab Spring, EU, EU / UE, foreign policy, Iran, Kemal Kirişci, Middle East, Nathalie Tocci, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Sinan Ülgen, Turkey, Turkey / Turquie, USA
openDemocracy (UK) 7 March 2012
Nathalie Tocci *
The Arab spring has cast Turkey back into the western fold and away from alternative alliance patterns which seemed to be in the pipeline only a few years ago. Turkey won’t act in Syria without its western partners. Meanwhile it is the very incompleteness of the Turkish model which is of such interest to its neighbours. (suite…)
Posted by Acturca in Academic / Académique, Acturca Journal Watch, Books / Livres, Caucasus / Caucase, Central Asia / Asie Centrale, 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, USA / Etats-Unis.
Tags: Abkhazia, adultery, Ahmet İçduygu, AKP, Alevism, Ali Çarkoğlu, Ana Maria Dobre, Applied Economics, Armenians, Aspenia, Ataturk, Australian Journal of Political Science, Ayhan Kaya, Aylin Ş. Görener, Azerbaijan, Ödül Celep, Ömer Çaha, Özgehan Şenyuva, Özlem Karahan Uysal, Bayram Ali Soner, Bülent Batuman, Bernard Steunenberg, Book Review, Brad Dennis, BRIC, Bulletin de l'association de géographes français, Can E. Mutlu, Canal Istanbul, Carlo Jean, Caucasus, Celile Ö. Dölekoglu, Cem Ilkorur, Cemil Boyraz, Ceylan Tokluoglu, Ceylanpinar Aquifer, CHP, Christiane Rüth, Chypre, Cigdem Kentmen, Claes H. De Vreese, Claude Ruiz, Comparative European Politics, Cyprus, David Saltzman, Democratization, Dilek Barlas, Diplomacy & Statecraft, Dorothée Schmid, Doğan Gurpinar, Ebru Ertugal, Ebru Ş. Canan-Sokullu, ECHR, economy, Edward J. Erickson, elections, Emil Souleimanov, Emrah Göker, Emre Öktem, Enterprise & Society, Esther Neuwirth, Ethnic and Racial Studies, ethno-nationalism, EU, EU / UE, Europe-Asia Studies, European Union Politics, Euroscepticism, Eylem Akdeniz, F. Stephen Larrabee, Faruk Ekmekçi, Fethullah Gülen, foreign direct investment, foreign policy, Gamze Avcı, Gareth Winrow, Güliz Sütçü, Güneş Murat Tezcür, Georgia, Germany, Gonul Tol, Greece, H. Tolga Bolukbasi, Hajo G. Boomgaarden, headscarf, Historical Journal of Film, History / Histoire, Ian O. Lesser, Irak, Iran, Israël, Istanbul, Işık Gürleyen, Jean-Pierre Derisbourg, Jeffrey Culpepper, Jews, Journal of Urban History, Kemal Kirişci, Kimitaka Matsuzato, Kivanç Ulusoy, Kivilcim Romya Bilgin, Kristin Fabbe, Kurds, Laurence Raw, Leiden Journal of International Law, Luca Ozzano, M. Hakan Yavuz, Malike Bileydi Koç, Malte C. Hinrichsen, Manolis Koumas, Mark Axelrod, Mathew Andrews, Mediterranean, Mehmet Öztan, Meltem Ahiska, Meltem Müftüler-Baç, Meltem Ş. Ucal, Mert Bilgin, Mete Başar Baypınar, Mete Feridun, Metin Ercan, MHP, Middle East, Middle East Policy, Middle East Review of International Affairs, Milli Görüs, Mingrelians, Mobility and Environment, Muslims, Nagorno-Karabakh, nationalism, Nationalities Papers, Neslihan Kaptanoğlu, Nora Fisher Onar, Norman Stone, Oded Eran, Omer Taspinar, Ottoman Empire, Paul Hymans, Paul van den Noord, Politics & Gender, politique étrangère, radio, Radio and Television, Revista de Cercetare şi Intervenţie Socială, Revue internationale et stratégique, Richard E. Matland, Romania, Russia / Russie, Saime Özçürümez, Sait Akşit, Sara B. Hobolt, Seda Kundak, Sema Gün, Semin Suvarierol, Senem Aydın Düzgit, Serpil Yilmaz, Seymen Atasoy, Sezgin Mercan, Simay Petek, Simon Tilford, South European Society and Politics, Sule Toktas, Survival, Syria, Tema. Journal of Land Use, terrorism, The International History Review, The International Spectator, The Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs, tourism, transnational minorities, Turcoscepticism, Turkey, Turkey / Turquie, Turkish studies, Union for the Mediterranean, urban studies, USA, V. Necla Geyikdagi, Valeria Giannotta, Water International, William A. Schabas, women’s rights, Wouter Van der Brug, Yonca Köksal, Yusuf Sarinay
Acturca Journal and Periodical Review, September 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…)