Dr. Diane King, Associate Professor of Anthropology at University of Kentucky, spoke on her recent book Kurdistan on the Global State: Kinship, Land and Community in Iraq, published in 2014 by Rutgers University Press. The book explores how people in Kurdistan connect socially through patron-client relationships, patrilineage and citizenship. Part of the WKU Libraries\u27 Far Away Places speaker series, Dr. King\u27s talk took place on March 31, 2016 at Barns and Nobles in Bowling. Dr. King earned her BA from Westmont College in Montecito, CA in 1988 followed by an MA from San Diego State University in 1992 and a PhD in Anthropology from Washington State University in 2000. King has taught at UK since 2007 and was a fellow at the Center for...
Spread across a number of countries around the world, and concentrated in four Middle Eastern countr...
The struggle against gender-based violence in the Iraqi Kurdistan Region has witnessed some signific...
This thesis is based on a 6 month ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 2018 in Hawler, Kurdistan. I e...
Anthropologist Diane E. King has written about everyday life in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, which ...
The Kurdish people are a unique ethnic group whose origins can be traced from the Zagros Mountains i...
Dr Zeynep Kaya, who is currently leading a research project on the role of international actors in e...
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq has made greater strides towards gender equality than the federal gover...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.The ro...
In this paper we provide an analysis of Kurdish women’s organizing in the diaspora, highlighting the...
Robin McAllister is Associate Professor of English at Sacred Hearrt University. This is an edited ve...
The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the disparity of treatment of women in Kurdistan, No...
A Notre Dame academic has had a rare and unique opportunity to meet the Prime Minister of the Kur...
The Kurds are a nomadic people whose homeland (Kurdistan) and population (of some 10 million) are no...
‘Culture Exchange UK & Kurdistan-Iraq’ is an artists’ research project instigated by Adalet Raza Gar...
This dissertation examines how Kurdistani young people experience contests of values in a state shap...
Spread across a number of countries around the world, and concentrated in four Middle Eastern countr...
The struggle against gender-based violence in the Iraqi Kurdistan Region has witnessed some signific...
This thesis is based on a 6 month ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 2018 in Hawler, Kurdistan. I e...
Anthropologist Diane E. King has written about everyday life in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, which ...
The Kurdish people are a unique ethnic group whose origins can be traced from the Zagros Mountains i...
Dr Zeynep Kaya, who is currently leading a research project on the role of international actors in e...
The Kurdistan Region of Iraq has made greater strides towards gender equality than the federal gover...
The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.The ro...
In this paper we provide an analysis of Kurdish women’s organizing in the diaspora, highlighting the...
Robin McAllister is Associate Professor of English at Sacred Hearrt University. This is an edited ve...
The purpose of this dissertation was to explore the disparity of treatment of women in Kurdistan, No...
A Notre Dame academic has had a rare and unique opportunity to meet the Prime Minister of the Kur...
The Kurds are a nomadic people whose homeland (Kurdistan) and population (of some 10 million) are no...
‘Culture Exchange UK & Kurdistan-Iraq’ is an artists’ research project instigated by Adalet Raza Gar...
This dissertation examines how Kurdistani young people experience contests of values in a state shap...
Spread across a number of countries around the world, and concentrated in four Middle Eastern countr...
The struggle against gender-based violence in the Iraqi Kurdistan Region has witnessed some signific...
This thesis is based on a 6 month ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 2018 in Hawler, Kurdistan. I e...