Denial of the crimes committed against the Armenians during the late Ottoman Empire has been a permanent feature of modern Turkish diplomatic statecraft, which stems from Turkey’s geopolitical anxieties closely tied with the nation-building process in the Anatolian lands at the expense of other non-Turkish and non-Muslim minorities. The aim of this article is to examine the current discursive debates and diplomatic statecraft in the construction of the denial policies of the Turkish state. Even though Turkey has now departed from collective amnesia and the Armenian genocide has been opened up to public debate, the denial policy has now become an integral part of the Islamic conservative Justice and Development Party’s neo-Ottomanist grand s...
Nearly one hundred years have passed since the Armenian genocide, which prefaced and in some ways en...
Nearly one hundred years have passed since the Armenian genocide, which prefaced and in some ways en...
This article focuses on how films are used as part of public policy to reproduce institutional denia...
The existing literature on the denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 tends to concentrate on eithe...
The existing literature on the denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 tends to concentrate on eithe...
The main source of animosity in modern Turkish–Armenian relations is the debate on the international...
The existing literature on the denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 tends to concentrate on eithe...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
The main source of animosity in modern Turkish–Armenian relations is the debate on the international...
The main source of animosity in modern Turkish–Armenian relations is the debate on the international...
The problematical notion of the ‘Armenian question’ has become a political and linguistic tool for t...
Turks see the issue of genocide recognition as a matter of national pride and international prestige...
The Turkish government’s 98-year-old denial of the Armenian genocide presents an unprecedented case ...
This article presents a critical analysis of the general “conflict resolution” approach for improvin...
Nearly one hundred years have passed since the Armenian genocide, which prefaced and in some ways en...
Nearly one hundred years have passed since the Armenian genocide, which prefaced and in some ways en...
This article focuses on how films are used as part of public policy to reproduce institutional denia...
The existing literature on the denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 tends to concentrate on eithe...
The existing literature on the denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 tends to concentrate on eithe...
The main source of animosity in modern Turkish–Armenian relations is the debate on the international...
The existing literature on the denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 tends to concentrate on eithe...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
Why should we return to the now 100-year-old genocide of the Ottoman Armenian population? The study ...
The main source of animosity in modern Turkish–Armenian relations is the debate on the international...
The main source of animosity in modern Turkish–Armenian relations is the debate on the international...
The problematical notion of the ‘Armenian question’ has become a political and linguistic tool for t...
Turks see the issue of genocide recognition as a matter of national pride and international prestige...
The Turkish government’s 98-year-old denial of the Armenian genocide presents an unprecedented case ...
This article presents a critical analysis of the general “conflict resolution” approach for improvin...
Nearly one hundred years have passed since the Armenian genocide, which prefaced and in some ways en...
Nearly one hundred years have passed since the Armenian genocide, which prefaced and in some ways en...
This article focuses on how films are used as part of public policy to reproduce institutional denia...