Research Outputs
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/2
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Publication Restricted Discrimination and silence: a case of minorty foundations in Turkey (1974)(Koç University, 2009) Kenanoğlu, Pınar Dinç; Ergin, Murat; 0000-0002-8447-8014; Koç University Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities; Comparative Studies in History and Society; 106427Publication Restricted Engendering citizenship: autonomous women's movements in Tunisia and Turkey(Koç University, 2019) Türkarslan, Gizem; Olcay, Özlem Altan; 0000-0003-0177-2726; Koç University Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities; Political Science and International Relations; 104197Publication Restricted Ethnic protest and the state: Explaining factors that influence ethnic groups to pursue violence(Koç University, 2015) Meek, Melissa; Akça, Belgin San; 0000-0002-3931-7924; Koç University Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities; International Relations; 107754Publication Open Access Protest, memory, and the production of 'civilized' citizens: two cases from Turkey and Lebanon(Routledge, 2012) Department of International Relations; Olcay, Özlem Altan; Faculty Member; Department of International Relations; College of Administrative Sciences and EconomicsThis article studies the proliferation of discourses of rationality and responsibility among a particular elite social group in Lebanon and Turkey, as they remember student mobilization of their past. I offer these episodes of student mobilization as acts of citizenship that create and make use of rapturous moments in the histories of their countries and institutions. I extend these acts of citizenship to the contemporary context and study the ways in which they become part of discourses of citizenship in unexpected ways. I propose that these narratives draw upon a set of local practices that reflect meanings of citizenship, originating from Western discourses of liberalism, albeit following a different route. In the narratives, violence and irrationality become the defining features of politicized behavior, whereas being civilized epitomizes good manners and rationality. Such boundary-drawing exercises contribute to making conceivable exclusionary social orders based on the idea of a hierarchical distribution of reason and social utility.Publication Restricted The impact of citizenship benefits on the national identity perception of the displaced communities: The Palestinians and comparisons with the Armenians in Lebanon(Koç University, 2010) Yeğin, Şenay; Somer, Murat; 0000-0003-1053-3751; Koç University Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities; International Relations; 110135Publication Restricted The impact of globalization on Japanese citizenship(Koç University, 2008) Dane, Zeliha Müge; Keyman, Emin Fuat; 0000-0002-1205-8336; Koç University Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities; International Relations; 45389Publication Restricted Turkish welfare state in the neoliberal era: Emergence of class-based citizenship regimes(Koç University, 2013) Cansoy, Mehmet Süleyman; Olcay, Özlem Altan; 0000-0003-0177-2726; Koç University Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities; International Relations; 104197