WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12514/3595
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Browsing WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu by Publication Category "Kitap Bölümü - Uluslararası"
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Book Part Actors: Kurdish National, Religious and Economic Blocs(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2017) Cicek, Cuma[No Abstract Available]Book Part Conflict Over The Institutional Form Of A Kurdish Political Region: Decentralisation, Regionalisation Or Federation(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2017) Cicek, Cuma[No Abstract Available]Book Part Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 3Decolonizing Architectural Education: Towards an Affective Pedagogy(Routledge, 2017) Tan, Pelin; Petrescu, D; Trogal, KBook Part The "greek East": Christianization and the Provincial Elites(Blackwell Science Publ, 2018) Krausmueller, Dirk[No Abstract Available]Book Part Citation - WoS: 3Kurds And Elections Under The Ak Party's Rule: The Shifting Internal And External Borders Of The Kurdish Political Region(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2017) Cicek, Cuma[No Abstract Available]Book Part Citation - WoS: 7Legal but Not Legitimate: the Changing Practices of Financial Citizenship in Turkey(Palgrave, 2019) Atalay, Z. Nurdan[No Abstract Available]Book Part Mardin Lockdown Experience: Strategies for a More Tolerant Urban Development(Bristol University Press, 2021) Atas, Z.; Atmaca, Y.The COVID-19 crises created a drastic confrontation with our urban, and housing environments. This chapter examines two very different parts of the city of Mardin, Turkey, one modern and one traditional, and how they dealt with the first wave of the pandemic. During the lockdown, the modern part of the city that was primarily developed through generic urban development patterns based on modernist infrastructure, went through a complete paralysis. The insufficient living conditions within its apartments and interrupted service provision emerged as the most problematic issues. On the other hand the historic parts of Mardin, built using traditional methods, sustained a healthier context, despite lacking many of the comforts of modern living and modern housing. Experiencing these differences in lockdown, the old city center’s efficiency in dealing with the pandemic, compared with the ineffectiveness of more modern neighborhoods, evoked the need to explore the features of our cities that create more self-sufficient, and thus, tolerable living conditions in the COVID-19 era. The urbanization of Turkey is generally analyzed in three consecutive periods that correspond to major social, political, economic, and spatial transformations: The Early Republican Era of 1920–50, the Post-War era of 1950–80, and the Neoliberal Era of post-1980 (Bozdogan, 2001, Akcan, 2012). The first period:was a scene for the emergence of the Turkish nation-state and the ambitious modernization efforts of the nationalist elite. The second period corresponds to the post-war era marked by popularization of politics and the unprecedented urban sprawl in Turkish cities, and finally, the post-1980 era reflects the integration of Turkey’s economy into the neoliberal world market and the cultural effects of globalization. The COVID-19 crises created a drastic confrontation with our urban, and housing environments. This chapter examines two very different parts of the city of Mardin, Turkey, one modern and one traditional, and how they dealt with the first wave of the pandemic. During the lockdown, the modern part of the city that was primarily developed through generic urban development patterns based on modernist infrastructure, went through a complete paralysis. The insufficient living conditions within its apartments and interrupted service provision emerged as the most problematic issues. On the other hand the historic parts of Mardin, built using traditional methods, sustained a healthier context, despite lacking many of the comforts of modern living and modern housing. Experiencing these differences in lockdown, the old city center’s efficiency in dealing with the pandemic, compared with the ineffectiveness of more modern neighborhoods, evoked the need to explore the features of our cities that create more self-sufficient, and thus, tolerable living conditions in the COVID-19 era. The urbanization of Turkey is generally analyzed in three consecutive periods that correspond to major social, political, economic, and spatial transformations: The Early Republican Era of 1920–50, the Post-War era of 1950–80, and the Neoliberal Era of post-1980 (Bozdogan, 2001, Akcan, 2012). The first period:was a scene for the emergence of the Turkish nation-state and the ambitious modernization efforts of the nationalist elite. The second period corresponds to the post-war era marked by popularization of politics and the unprecedented urban sprawl in Turkish cities, and finally, the post-1980 era reflects the integration of Turkey’s economy into the neoliberal world market and the cultural effects of globalization. © Bristol University Press 2021.Book Part Mardin Lockdown Experience: Strategies for a More Tolerant Urban Development(Bristol University Press, 2021) Atas, Zeynep; Atmaca, YuvacanBook Part Muslim, Alevior Kurd? Religion, Nation and Identity Conflicts(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2017) Cicek, Cuma[No Abstract Available]Book Part Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 4n-3 and n-6 Fatty Acids in Fish: A Focus on Non-Marine Species(Academic Press Ltd-Elsevier Science Ltd, 2019) Kacar, SemraBook Part Nation or Class? Conflict of Interest(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2017) Cicek, Cuma[No Abstract Available]Book Part National Becoming, Regional Variation and Everyday Moments the Film Enquiry Committee, Uttar Pradesh and the Student Cinema-Goer(Routledge, 2016) Schulz, Suzanne L.; Rao, A; Rajagopal, ABook Part Negotiations Among Three Kurdish Blocks(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2017) Cicek, Cuma[No Abstract Available]Book Part Sacred Dimensions: Constantinopolitan Monasticism(Cambridge Univ Press, 2022) Krausmueller, Dirk[No Abstract Available]Book Part The System of Action: Historical, State-Based, Geopolitical, European and Global Dynamics(I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2017) Cicek, Cuma[No Abstract Available]Book Part The Relationship of City-Individual in Zazaki Literature: Missing Bodies, Narrowing Roads, Expanding Imagination(Istanbul Univ Press, Istanbul Univ Rectorate, 2021) Akman, IlyasAccording to UNESCO'S language report (Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger), Zazaki/ Zazaish, Turkey's third most spoken language, is endangered.The Zaza language is shown as one of 2,500 languages that are endangered on the 40th page of the report. It is extremely important to produce literary works in this language in order for the language to survive. Authors who write works in Zazaki are aware of the importance of their work. When the authors create content, they attach great importance to village life, where Zazaki is spoken in its pure form. Villages, with their isolated structures, maintain homogeneity of language and culture by ensuring continuity between generations. On the other hand, cities don't have pure languages and cultures because of their heterogeneous structures. The city phenomenon is often portrayed negatively in Zazaki literature such that some of the works have characters afraid of the word city. In some works written in Zazaki, there are many negative adjectives for cities, such as cemetery, hole, and curse. People keep a distance from the city because of marginalization, cultural difference, linguistic adaptation, and income inequality between classes. The biggest source of consolation for the individuals who struggle with the city is to return to the old, happy days they lived in their villages through dreams. In this study, we will focus on the city-individual relationship through the novels, poetry, and stories written in Zazaki. We will attempt to analyze the aforementioned relationship through cultural, economic, and linguistic factors.Book Part Book Part Warfare and Alliances in Ra.s Al-.ayn: Hamidiye Regiments, Bedouin Tribes, and Ottoman Governors, 1895-1905(Univ Toronto Press, 2024) Ciftci, Erdal

