1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of Turkey's Diasporas

Edited By Ayca Arkilic, Banu Senay Copyright 2024
    584 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This handbook, the first of its kind, provides a rich overview of the socio-political issues and dynamics impacting Turkey’s diasporic groups and diaspora policymaking.

    Turkey constitutes an important case study in the field of diaspora studies with a diaspora population of around 6.5 million. This handbook therefore brings together emerging and established scholars to explore the central issues, actors, and processes relating to Turkey’s diasporic groups and diaspora outreach. Taken together, the historical and contemporary analyses presented in this volume provide readers a multi-lens perspective on the trajectories of Turkey’s diasporic communities and diaspora policymaking in a wide range of regional contexts, including Europe, North America, and Oceania. The handbook comprises six analytical parts:

    • Contextualising Turkey’s diasporas: past and present
    • Localisation, transnational belongings, and identity
    • Governing diasporas
    • Micro-spaces and everyday practices
    • Cultural production, aesthetics, and creativity
    • Country-specific perspectives

    The volume offers insights into the debates and processes that structure each of these thematic clusters, but also provides a comprehensive overview of the dynamics shaping Turkey’s diverse diaspora populations today.

    The contributions encompass a range of disciplines, including anthropology, history, human geography, political science, international relations, and sociology, and the volume will be vital reading for anyone interested in Turkey, the Middle East, and diasporas.

    1. Turkey’s Diasporas and Diaspora Policymaking in Flux: An Introduction

    Ayca Arkilic and Banu Senay

    Part I: Contextualising Turkey’s Diasporas: Past and Present

    2. Moving Populations: The Foundations of Diaspora in the Early Republic of Turkey

    Christopher Houston and Joost Jongerden

    3. From ‘Guest-Workers’ to ‘Muslims’: Representations of Turkish-Origin Migrants in Europe

    Ayhan Kaya

    4. A History of Turkish Guest Workers in Germany

    Jennifer A. Miller

    5. The Making of New Diasporic Communities?: Post-2000 Migration from Turkey to Europe

    Zeynep Yanaşmayan

    6. Migration and Citizenship Regimes in Europe: The Meandering Path to Dual Citizenship in Germany and the Netherlands

    Zeynep Kadirbeyoglu

    7. The Diaspora Paradox: Methodological Nationalism, Methodological Amnesia, Challenges, and Interventions

    Ipek Demir

    Part II: Localisation, Transnational Belongings, and Identity

    8. Constantinopolitans in the Diaspora of the City: The Global Community of Rum Polites of Istanbul

    İlay Romain Örs

    9. Enforced Departures, Anxious Arrivals: A Turkish Diaspora in Israel

    Karel Valansi

    10. The Formation of a Kurdish Diaspora and Transnational Politics

    Östen Wahlbeck

    11. The Alevi Movement in Europe: A Collective Struggle for Visibility, Rights, and Recognition

    Besim Can Zırh

    12. The Turkish Muslim Field in Western Europe

    Benjamin Bruce

    Part III: Governing Diasporas

    13. Turkey’s Diaspora Engagement Policies: Past and Present

    Damla B. Aksel

    14. State-Sponsored Transnational Religious Fields: The Case of the Diyanet

    Zana Çitak

    15. Turkey’s Diaspora Youth Diplomacy

    Banu Senay and Ayca Arkilic

    16. Unpacking the State from the Inside Out: Emerging Spaces and Actors of Diaspora Governance in the Border Province of Edirne

    Zeynep Kaşlı

    17. Non-resident Citizen Voting and Transnational Mobilisation of Political Parties: The Case of Turkey

    Inci Öykü Yener-Roderburg

    18. Turkish Immigrant-origin Political Parties in Europe: The Case of DENK in the Netherlands

    Floris Vermeulen

    19. How Has Turkey Re-fashioned its Diaspora Engagement Policy during the COVID-19 Pandemic?

    Gizem Kolbaşı-Muyan

    Part IV: Micro-spaces and Everyday Practices

    20. “Mosques are life itself there”: The Social Lives of Turkish-Sunni Mosques in Germany

    Devran Koray Öcal

    21. Performance, Advocacy, and Transnational Networks of Solidarity for Turkish-Speaking Queer Migrants in Berlin

    Erkan Gürsel

    22. Whose Neighbourhood, Whose City, Whose Country? Visible and Invisible Turkish Diasporic Spaces in Berlin and New York City

    Annika Marlen Hinze

    23. Post-Migration Society and Turkish Football Clubs in Berlin

    Oktay Aktan

    24. Marriage Trajectories of Turkey-originated Youth in Europe

    Anika Liversage

    25. Lending Circles: A Solidarity Practice among Migrant Women from Turkey in Germany

    Başak Bilecen

    Part V: Cultural Production, Aesthetics, and Creativity

    26. Turkish Rap Music, Made in Germany: Origins, History, and Identity

    Thomas Solomon

    27. A Marketplace of Love: Muhabbet and the Construction of European Alevi Imaginaries

    Alex Kreger

    28. Cinematographic Expressions of Diasporic Experience: Decades of Turkish-German Cinema

    Ayça Tunç Cox

    29. Writing Home and Selves in Diaspora: Narratives, Texts, and Practices

    Özlem Belçim Galip

    30. Graphic Politics: Resistance and Community Building through Comics Activism among Turkey’s Diaspora(s)

    Can T. Yalçınkaya

    31. From Berlin to the Globe: The Transnational Story of Döner Kebab

    Maren Möhring

    Part VI: Country-Specific Perspectives

    32. Turkey’s Diaspora in Germany: A Transnational Community Divided between Transnational Integration and Distant-Nationalism

    Yaşar Aydın

    33. The 'Turkish' Community in France: An Influential Branch of the Diaspora

    Samim Akgönül

    34. Political Participation and Representation of Dutch Citizens with Roots in Turkey

    Nermin Aydemir and Liza Mügge

    35. Alevi Kurds in the United Kingdom: Community Formation, Visibility, and Integration

    Ümit Çetin and Celia Jenkins

    36. United We Divide: Turkey’s Hyper-Polarised Diaspora in the USA

    Sultan Tepe and Selin Bengi Gümrükçü

    37. Turkey’s Diasporas Down Under: Migration to Australia and New Zealand

    Banu Senay and Ayca Arkilic

    Biography

    Ayca Arkilic is Senior Lecturer in Political Science and International Relations at Victoria University of Wellington. Her research interests are state-diaspora relations and Islam in the West. She is the author of Diaspora Diplomacy: The Politics of Turkish Emigration to Europe (2022).

    Banu Senay is Senior Lecturer in the Discipline of Anthropology at the School of Social Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney. She is the author of Beyond Turkey's Borders: Long-distance Kemalism, State Politics, and the Turkish Diaspora (2013) and Musical Ethics and Islam: The Art of Playing the Ney (2020).

    "Diaspora in migration studies is a deeply contested concept with often diametrically opposed scholarly approaches. It is also a highly politicised concept and gives sometimes rise to heated debates. Without a doubt diaspora cannot be tackled with a one-size-fits-all approach. The editors of this handbook have understood this quite well. They have compiled chapters that together display the multitude of contextual and historical manifestations and modalities of diaspora. The chapters are published in a Handbook of Turkey’s Diasporas, but the contributions are a must-read also for those working in other fields."

    Thijl SunierChair of Islam in European Societies and Professor of Anthropology of Religion, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

    "In this collection of illuminating contributions on Turkey’s diasporas, Ayca Arkilic and Banu Senay have assembled a highly innovative group of expert authors who give guidance to this crucial case in diaspora studies. The content of this volume is characterized by diverse disciplines, and the contributions convincingly employ insights from various conceptual perspectives. They establish new ground in topics ranging from the historical trajectories, emigration patterns and efforts at diaspora control to external voting, dual citizenship and engagement in country-of-origin affairs. Each of the individual chapters draws a differentiated portrait. A truly remarkable achievement."

    Thomas FaistProfessor of Sociology, Bielefeld University

    "Turkey’s diaspora population is an impressive account of migration spread globally. The volume traces the paths of Turkey’s diasporas from “guest workers” in Europe to “citizens abroad” worldwide. Its chapters show various connections across different family and commercial networks, linking private and public spaces as well as economic and political ones; they present the impact of their experiences abroad on the home country and vice-versa, that is the effect of home country on their everyday experiences abroad. Past and present modes of organisation, mobilisation, new dynamics on cultural production combining various local, national, regional inputs, reflect multiple belongings and a sense of citizenship here and there. This handbook, in which empirical research meets conceptual analysis, is also important for comparisons with other diasporic experiences and an indispensable example for those working on this important social and political issue that is at the core of mobility of individuals and globalisation of states."

    Riva Kastoryano, Research Director Emerite CNRS, Sciences Po - CERI