The arbitrary use of judicial power in targeting signatories of the January 2016 Academics for Peace petition is the latest in a long series of legal charges filed against civil society actors by authorities, and demonstrates the Turkish government’s ongoing campaign to silent dissent in all its forms. On January 11, 2016, Academics for Peace circulated a petition titled “We Will Not be a Party to this Crime,” calling on the Turkish government to end its siege of Kurdish rebels in southeaster..
Acar YG, Coskan C. Academic activism and its impact on individual-level mobilization, sources of lea...
Tezcan was one of over 2,000 academics who signed a petition titled “We will not be party to this cr...
The law is usually associated as antagonistic to despotism, thought of as a source of freedom. But e...
by Noemi Levy-Aksu Since January 2016 the Academics for Peace case has become one of the symbols of ...
Criminal prosecutions continue in Turkey against signatories of the Academics for Peace petition. Ri...
On the 5th of December 2017 , the hearings of the penal cases are starting to be held in Turkey, reg...
On January 2016, a small Turkish organization of activists, Academics for Peace (AfP) called the Tur...
An Opening Remark A couple of days ago, the Constitutional Court in Turkey took a decision of possib...
Frontline Defenders had issued an chronique laying out an overview of the judicial processes faced b...
The ‘Academics for Peace Petition’, published in January 2016, was signed by around two thousand aca...
Below you can find a brief summary of the current figures in relation to the trials against signator...
It has been more than a month that peace academics of Turkey are on trial. More than a hunderd of he...
On 11 January 2016, 1128 academics in Turkey and abroad signed a petition calling on Turkish authori...
Dilsa Deniz, an anthropologist of the Alevi-Kurdish religion, was fired from her position as an assi...
On December 5, 2017, the trials began for thosewho signed the Academics for Peace petition in Januar...
Acar YG, Coskan C. Academic activism and its impact on individual-level mobilization, sources of lea...
Tezcan was one of over 2,000 academics who signed a petition titled “We will not be party to this cr...
The law is usually associated as antagonistic to despotism, thought of as a source of freedom. But e...
by Noemi Levy-Aksu Since January 2016 the Academics for Peace case has become one of the symbols of ...
Criminal prosecutions continue in Turkey against signatories of the Academics for Peace petition. Ri...
On the 5th of December 2017 , the hearings of the penal cases are starting to be held in Turkey, reg...
On January 2016, a small Turkish organization of activists, Academics for Peace (AfP) called the Tur...
An Opening Remark A couple of days ago, the Constitutional Court in Turkey took a decision of possib...
Frontline Defenders had issued an chronique laying out an overview of the judicial processes faced b...
The ‘Academics for Peace Petition’, published in January 2016, was signed by around two thousand aca...
Below you can find a brief summary of the current figures in relation to the trials against signator...
It has been more than a month that peace academics of Turkey are on trial. More than a hunderd of he...
On 11 January 2016, 1128 academics in Turkey and abroad signed a petition calling on Turkish authori...
Dilsa Deniz, an anthropologist of the Alevi-Kurdish religion, was fired from her position as an assi...
On December 5, 2017, the trials began for thosewho signed the Academics for Peace petition in Januar...
Acar YG, Coskan C. Academic activism and its impact on individual-level mobilization, sources of lea...
Tezcan was one of over 2,000 academics who signed a petition titled “We will not be party to this cr...
The law is usually associated as antagonistic to despotism, thought of as a source of freedom. But e...