Turkey's European Union (EU) negotiations are generally believed to positively affect the rights of ethnic minorities in Turkey. Through a detailed case study, this article examines how members of the Kurdish diaspora in Europe aim to influence this process through lobbying, and to what extent ‘Europeanization’ is channelling the organisation and strategies of the Kurdish lobby. We focus on three facets of transnational diaspora lobbying: political opportunity structures (understood as formal institutions), discursive opportunity structures and the organisational flexibility of activists to adapt to new opportunities. Drawing on interviews, EU documents and documentation from Brussels-based Kurdish organisations, we find the growing importa...
Based on a sociological case study on Kurdish mobilization in Marseille, France; this article aims t...
Insurgents often develop international connections and benefit from external assistance from a varie...
This article analyses how Kurdish diaspora (from Turkey) engage in de-Turkification, that is correct...
The “Kurdish question” has become one of the most protracted conflicts in Turkey’s recent history, a...
The bulk of scholarship on EU–Turkey relations has focused mainly on intergovermental or state–socie...
The growing literature on transnationalism documents the ways in which immigrants and refugees stay ...
The Kurdish diaspora is the largest stateless diaspora in the world and it is thought to be the most...
Kurds are the largest stateless ethnic group in the world, and Kurdish diasporas have for many years...
This chapter examines the Kurdish diaspora's ethno-political battles for identity. Much work on the ...
This study aims to address a historical paradox: how can we understand the Kurdish movement's EU pol...
Published online: 12 Aug 2015Germany might be considered as the European country that has suffered t...
This study aims at analyzing the impact of the European integration process on Kurdish nationalism i...
Although means of ethnic lobbying and propaganda have been available for few centuries in the form o...
The Europeanisation approach covers a very broad spectrum, and the notion has been blurred by the ex...
Online onlyThe political sway of diaspora groups has increased over the last few decades due to the ...
Based on a sociological case study on Kurdish mobilization in Marseille, France; this article aims t...
Insurgents often develop international connections and benefit from external assistance from a varie...
This article analyses how Kurdish diaspora (from Turkey) engage in de-Turkification, that is correct...
The “Kurdish question” has become one of the most protracted conflicts in Turkey’s recent history, a...
The bulk of scholarship on EU–Turkey relations has focused mainly on intergovermental or state–socie...
The growing literature on transnationalism documents the ways in which immigrants and refugees stay ...
The Kurdish diaspora is the largest stateless diaspora in the world and it is thought to be the most...
Kurds are the largest stateless ethnic group in the world, and Kurdish diasporas have for many years...
This chapter examines the Kurdish diaspora's ethno-political battles for identity. Much work on the ...
This study aims to address a historical paradox: how can we understand the Kurdish movement's EU pol...
Published online: 12 Aug 2015Germany might be considered as the European country that has suffered t...
This study aims at analyzing the impact of the European integration process on Kurdish nationalism i...
Although means of ethnic lobbying and propaganda have been available for few centuries in the form o...
The Europeanisation approach covers a very broad spectrum, and the notion has been blurred by the ex...
Online onlyThe political sway of diaspora groups has increased over the last few decades due to the ...
Based on a sociological case study on Kurdish mobilization in Marseille, France; this article aims t...
Insurgents often develop international connections and benefit from external assistance from a varie...
This article analyses how Kurdish diaspora (from Turkey) engage in de-Turkification, that is correct...