This paper argues that Europeans worked to transform the bases for group affiliation in territories of the former Ottoman Empire, insisting on national and linguistic self-identification that created dissonance among the population. Focusing on the decades between the two World Wars, when the new Middle Eastern borders were being created and contested, the paper analyzes two episodes in which the League of Nations sought to document the identity of Middle Eastern populations in order to allocate contested territory: the Sanjak Question (Alexandretta) and the Mosul Question. Each province was home to a population diverse in language and religion; in each, the League of Nations intervened to insist that one or another group must be pr...
This article examines the reasons, consequences and penetration ways of the nationalist movement in ...
The progress of Western countries and the colonization of oil-rich Muslim countries clustered within...
This paper argues that the Middle East as an analytical or geopolitical ‘concept’ has become too pro...
In the Ottoman Empire there was no visible dividing line between secular and religious law. The Otto...
The Ottoman Empire's immigration and settlement policies were redefined in the nineteenth and early ...
In 19th-century Europe, the juridical texture of space changed entirely. The state came to dominate ...
This article re-opens the discussion about the Ottoman millet practice. The best known stereotypes c...
Why, in the years around 1920, did the concept of ‘minority’ suddenly spring to prominence in public...
Even if there still is a wide debate about the nature and the de nition of the empire, most scholars...
This article explores the conditions under which political modernization leads to nation building, t...
Résumé de l'ouvrage : For the last two centuries, the nation state has posed a formidable challenge...
The Mediterranean Programme The Mediterranean Programme was set up at the Robert Schuman Centre for...
“Subject Peoples” arrived in the language of peacemaking after the Great War primarily as a way to u...
The article analyses the role of the Ottoman Christians in the national identity building process in...
(i): The first part of this thesis questions the concept of ‘minority’, and the way it has been used...
This article examines the reasons, consequences and penetration ways of the nationalist movement in ...
The progress of Western countries and the colonization of oil-rich Muslim countries clustered within...
This paper argues that the Middle East as an analytical or geopolitical ‘concept’ has become too pro...
In the Ottoman Empire there was no visible dividing line between secular and religious law. The Otto...
The Ottoman Empire's immigration and settlement policies were redefined in the nineteenth and early ...
In 19th-century Europe, the juridical texture of space changed entirely. The state came to dominate ...
This article re-opens the discussion about the Ottoman millet practice. The best known stereotypes c...
Why, in the years around 1920, did the concept of ‘minority’ suddenly spring to prominence in public...
Even if there still is a wide debate about the nature and the de nition of the empire, most scholars...
This article explores the conditions under which political modernization leads to nation building, t...
Résumé de l'ouvrage : For the last two centuries, the nation state has posed a formidable challenge...
The Mediterranean Programme The Mediterranean Programme was set up at the Robert Schuman Centre for...
“Subject Peoples” arrived in the language of peacemaking after the Great War primarily as a way to u...
The article analyses the role of the Ottoman Christians in the national identity building process in...
(i): The first part of this thesis questions the concept of ‘minority’, and the way it has been used...
This article examines the reasons, consequences and penetration ways of the nationalist movement in ...
The progress of Western countries and the colonization of oil-rich Muslim countries clustered within...
This paper argues that the Middle East as an analytical or geopolitical ‘concept’ has become too pro...