Yener-Roderburg, I. Ö. & Yetiş, E.Ö. (2024)
Politics and Governance, 12, 7546. doi:10.17645/pag.7546
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This article covers a unique form of political mobilisation within the Turkey-originated diasporic community in Europe that formed after Turkey introduced external voting in 2012. Although existing literature has paid attention to the impact of homeland political parties on external voting rights and diaspora organisations’ role in electoral campaigns, these organisations’ impact on members’ mobilisation capacities for certain homeland parties remains understudied. This article tackles this topic by first comparing Turkey-originated diaspora organisations in Germany and the UK. Secondly, it guides future empirical work on the impact of the diaspora organisations on remote partisans’ political orientation by taking the dominant emigrant profile in a residence country dimension into the study of external voting. Focusing on eligible Turkish citizens, the findings of this article are based on participant observation and 60 in-depth interviews conducted with remote voters who participated in the mobilisation of Turkey-based political parties in Germany between 2018 and 2023 and in the UK between 2021 and 2023 through diaspora organisations.
Yetiş, E. Ö., & Bakırlıoğlu, Y. (2023)
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 10(1), 630. doi: 10.1057/s41599-023-02147-2
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Slow violence is an analytical concept that reveals the unseen and unrecognised forms of violence that accumulate over time and space, leading to devastating environmental and social consequences. This paper argues that slow violence involves discursive practices that render violence-producing mechanisms and processes invisible, concealed, and misrecognised and ensure the continuance of violent systems by hindering cognitive and emotional awareness of the links between different forms of violence and social harms, and thus, any potential resistance against them. These discursive practices are identified as fatalistic normalisation, daunted managerialism, and afflictive condemnation, all of which operate in tandem to veil the links between different forms of violence and social harm. The paper provides an operational framework of slow violence to help unveil these links and pave the way towards cognitive and emotional awareness for radical social transformation.
Conference Convenors: Zeynep Kaya (University of Sheffield) and Robert Lowe (London School of Economics and Political Science)
Organising Committee: Arda Bilgen, Marouf Cabi, Mostafa Khalili, Veli Yadirgi, Erman Örsan Yetiş, Fulya Atacan, Isabel Käser.
https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/politics/research/kurdish-studies-conference
Yetiş, E.Ö. (2023)
Çankaya Belediyesi Kadın Bülteni, 22, 23-29. doi: 10.5281/zenodo.10432193