About Me:
Ph.D. candidate in Sociology
I am internested in Theory and Methology, Statitfication and Power.
Focus on Middle East begins:
The division of Kurdistan, a historic and a geographic region, between the semi-sovereign states of Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Syria after the end of First World War excluded Kurds from the right to full 'citizenship' and the right to a Kurdish state 'a homeland'. These states governed Kurds and Kurdistan through most repressive techniques of political economy, apparatuses of security, and communication technology. Kurds challenged these states' exercise of sovereign
right over Kurdistan, and they deemed the borderline drawn between parts of Kurdistan unjust, against rules of natural law, natural justice, and cause of instability to Kurdish and Kurdistan society. In the present, most democratic member states of the international community favour a lasting settlement to the Kurdish Question through the foundation of Kurdish right to a sovereign 'homeland'.
Area(s) of Training
anthropology, sociology, other
Current Area of Employment
Independent Scholar