23 results
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2. Access to Urban Leisure: Investigating Mobility Justice for Transgender and Gender Diverse People on Public Transport.
- Author
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Shakibaei, Shahin and Vorobjovas-Pinta, Oscar
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC transit , *SOCIAL justice , *GENDER nonconformity , *HARASSMENT , *SOCIAL marginality , *ACCESS to justice , *SEX discrimination , *SEXUAL minorities , *TRANSPHOBIA - Abstract
Literature on mobility justice suggest that socially disadvantaged people experience uneven access to movement. The theme of diversity in terms of gender and its interplay with mobility and leisure have attracted some scholarly attention. However, research into transgender and gender diverse mobilities and its impact to leisure access remains limited, particularly from non-Western perspectives. This paper endeavors to fill this gap by investigating transgender and gender diverse mobilities in Istanbul, Turkey. Drawing upon 49 qualitative interviews with gender diverse and transgender public transport users in Istanbul, this study contributes to a scholarly discussion exploring the relationship between gender diversity, mobility, and their access to leisure. As such, it furthers the field of gender-oriented leisure. Transgender and gender diverse individuals continue to face significant issues, such as violence, discrimination, and harassment, when using public transport. Based on the experiences of the respondents, this paper concludes that driver training and education, and proactive educational messaging around gender minorities in public spaces could significantly improve the comfort and safety of transgender and gender diverse public transport users. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Evaluation of the Polyethylene Glycol Impregnation and Vacuum Freeze-Drying Method for Waterlogged Archaeological Wood: Conservation of the Yenikapı 1 Shipwreck.
- Author
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Kılıç, Namık and Kılıç, Aslı Gökçe
- Subjects
- *
WOOD , *FREEZE-drying , *SHIPWRECKS , *CHEMICAL decomposition , *SCANNING electron microscopy , *POLYETHYLENE glycol - Abstract
The YK 1 shipwreck, found at Yenikapı, Istanbul, is one of 37 shipwrecks dating to the medieval era. This paper describes the studies and the processes which were conducted to conserve the YK 1. Firstly, the level of physical and chemical degradation of the wood from the YK 1 was examined, which revealed that the wood was highly degraded. Therefore, PEG 2000 was chosen for the impregnation process before vacuum freeze-drying. In addition, the ASE values confirmed that the PEG 2000 impregnation and vacuum freeze-drying method together were successful in conserving the YK 1, with values higher than PEG 2000 impregnation and vacuum freeze-drying methods alone. The concentration of the PEG solution in the tank was monitored throughout the impregnation process. Following this, samples taken from the wood cores were analysed using FTIR to evaluate the effectiveness of the impregnation process. Finally, SEM was used to examine the effectiveness of the PEG 2000 impregnation and vacuum freeze-drying method. The SEM images showed that the PEG 2000 was uniformly distributed, and the wood had no deformation after freeze-drying. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Structural Characteristics of the Earthquake-Prone Building Stock in Istanbul and Prioritization of Existing Buildings in Terms of Seismic Risk-A Pilot Project Conducted in Istanbul.
- Author
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Aydogdu, Hasan Huseyin, Demir, Cem, Comert, Mustafa, Kahraman, Tayfun, and Ilki, Alper
- Subjects
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PILOT projects , *EFFECT of earthquakes on buildings , *REINFORCED concrete buildings , *URBAN renewal , *EARTHQUAKE engineering , *SEISMIC networks - Abstract
Earthquakes have caused catastrophic results in cities since the beginning of settled life, and the cumulative experience of these events has indicated that the lack of seismic resilience brings enormous economic losses and threatens human life. Consequently, the importance of seismic risk mitigation of earthquake-prone structures has arisen to reduce the primary and secondary losses resulting from seismic events in the last decades as developments in the earthquake engineering field occur. The first step for ensuring seismic resilience is the identification of risky buildings, which is a difficult challenge for metropolises like Istanbul since the building stock consists of over a million buildings. Applying code-based detailed assessments to so many buildings is not practical in terms of time and cost. Moreover, the current code-based detailed assessment methodologies such as Provisions for the Seismic Risk Evaluation of Existing Buildings under Urban Renewal Law (2019) and Turkish Building Earthquake Code (2018) provide discrete predictions for existing buildings as either risky or non-risky or satisfying life safety/controlled damage or not. However, a ranking system based on a reliable and realistic risk classification to prioritize the buildings is needed. Therefore, as a pilot project, nearly 23,000 reinforced concrete buildings in 37 different districts of Istanbul have been investigated by Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality (IMM) through PERA2019 performance-based rapid assessment methodology by considering the Design Level and Scenario-Based Earthquake cases. This is the most up-to-date and comprehensive site survey and analysis conducted in Istanbul up to now. In this paper, the characteristics of the building stock in Istanbul based on the conducted site work and the outcomes of the rapid seismic safety assessment efforts are summarized. Then, a discussion on the seismic risk evaluation of the existing residential buildings based on the prioritization of the examined buildings is presented through the results obtained for the Design Level and Scenario-Based Earthquake cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Children's access to play during the COVID-19 pandemic in the urban context in Turkey.
- Author
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Sullu, Bengi
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *PUBLIC spaces , *YOUNG adults , *EXPERT evidence , *CIVIL society - Abstract
In this opinion paper, I trace children's access to play in the urban context against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing on the news, civil society organizations' reports and conversations with experts working in Istanbul, Turkey during the last year, I show how children's access to public places in the city gets constrained by urban governance that neglects young people's needs. Examples from the neighborhoods of Istanbul, Turkey, indicate the importance of having in mind the whole community while thinking about bringing play opportunities in public spaces and at the same time raise questions about children's participation in these processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Reimagining the cultural impact of neoliberalism: an analysis of Istanbul and Liverpool biennials.
- Author
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Genc, Eda Aylin, Kennedy-Schtyk, Beccy, and Miles, Steven
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BIENNIAL & triennial exhibitions , *21ST century art , *NEOLIBERALISM , *CULTURAL policy , *CULTURAL production - Abstract
Biennials are one of the most important stagers of contemporary art practices serving as spaces of reflexivity for artistic production, compressing a glocal sphere, offering a culturally inclusive debate. They play a key role in the global transformation of cultural production in a neoliberal age. Based on empirical data collected from the 15th Istanbul and 10th Liverpool biennials, this paper seeks to interrogate the role they play in the relationship between the cultural production and consumption of the arts. The paper presents an alternative perspective from which we can begin to better understand the cultural impact of neoliberalism. It is suggested, on this basis, that as glocal spaces of culture, biennials can generate culturally inclusive debates and participatory constellations offering a more democratic access to cultural participation. They are in this sense a discursive space and facilitate the opening-up of a critical space in which cultural policy can offer a more sophisticated means of critiquing the impact of neoliberalism on the arts world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. The Importance of Nostalgic Emotions and Memorable Tourism Experience in the Cultural Experience.
- Author
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Keskin, Emrah, Aktaş, Ferzan, Yayla, Özgür, and Dedeoğlu, Bekir Bora
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HERITAGE tourism , *EMOTIONS , *SATISFACTION , *TOURIST attractions , *INTENTION - Abstract
In the destinations they visit, tourists wish to see historical structures with that they can establish a connection with. The effects of nostalgic bonds established through experiences can be evaluated only by the determination of individuals' developing intentions and judgments. The main purpose of this study was to identify the relationships between nostalgic emotions, memorable tourism experience, satisfaction, revisit intention, and recommendation intention. In this regard, views of the tourists who visited İstanbul were collected through surveys. A total of 483 surveys were obtained and the data were analyzed using AMOS software. The obtained results showed that strong nostalgic bonds had a positive impact on behavioral intentions such as revisit intention by increasing satisfaction and memorability. The findings of this paper indicated that nostalgic emotions significantly affect memorable tourism experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. Estimation of multicomponent stress–strength reliability based on unit Burr XII distribution: an application to dam occupancy rate of Istanbul, Turkey.
- Author
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Akgül, Fatma Gül
- Subjects
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MARKOV chain Monte Carlo , *OCCUPANCY rates , *MAXIMUM likelihood statistics , *DAMS - Abstract
In this paper, we consider the estimation of a multicomponent stress–strength reliability when stress and strength variables follow unit Bur XII distribution. In estimation procedure, the maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods are used. The maximum likelihood estimator is obtained via iterative methods. The asymptotic confidence interval is constructed using asymptotic properties of the corresponding estimator. In addition, two bootstrap confidence intervals are constructed. Bayesian estimator is obtained using three different approximation methods: Lindley's approximation, Tierney–Kadane approximation and Markov Chain Monte Carlo method. The interval estimation based on Bayesian method is studied. The simulation study is conducted to investigate and compare the performance of the considered methods. Finally, an original data set, general dam occupancy rate of Istanbul, Turkey obtained from Istanbul Statistic Office, is analysed in the concept of multicomponent stress–strength reliability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Middle Permian basic and acidic volcanism in the Istanbul zone (NW Turkey): evidence for post-variscan extensional magmatism.
- Author
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Babaoğlu, Cumhur, Topuz, Gültekin, Okay, Aral I., Köksal, Serhat, Wang, Jia-Min, and Toksoy-Köksal, Fatma
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTARY rocks , *RED beds , *HERCYNIAN orogeny , *VOLCANISM , *RHYOLITE , *PETROLOGY , *MARINE sediments - Abstract
The Istanbul Zone (NW Turkey) forms the eastward extension of Avalonia and was subjected to deformation, uplift and erosion for a time period of 40–50 Ma following the collision with the Sakarya Zone during Early to Late Carboniferous. This paper deals with the petrology and age of the volumetrically minor basic and acidic volcanism at the lowermost horizons of Middle Permian continental red beds, which are overlain by Lower Triassic marine sedimentary rocks in the Kocaeli Peninsula. The volcanic activity is represented mainly by amygdaloidal basalt, rhyolite and minor trachydacite. The amygdaloidal basalt was derived from near-primary middle-K calc-alkaline mantle melts with negligible crystal fractionation. On the other hand, the rhyolite and trachydacite compositionally resemble A2-type rhyolites and underwent low-pressure crystal fractionation as indicated by the presence of a significant Eu anomaly. Initial ɛNd values of amygdaloidal basalt range from 0.0 to 1.5 and those of rhyolite-trachydacite are between −0.4 and −3.4. Amygdaloidal basalt and rhyolite-trachydacite are not directly related to each other by crystal fractionation. Amygdaloidal basalt probably represents the product of the near-primary mantle melts from low-degree melting of a spinel peridotitic source, and the rhyolite-trachydacite originated from highly-fractionated products of basic magmas that are slightly more alkaline than amygdaloidal basalt. However, basic and intermediate products of alkaline basic magmas are unknown in this region to date. U-Pb dating of zircons from a rhyolite sample yielded an igneous crystallization age of 261 ± 3 Ma (2σ), suggesting that the date of deposition of the continental red beds goes back to the latest Middle Permian. Based on the transgressive nature of the Permian-Triassic sequence that starts from the Middle Permian continental red beds and grades into Lower Triassic marine deposits, we suggest that the volcanism likely occurred in an extensional setting. This extension was concurrent with the northward subduction of the Palaeo-Tethys beneath the Sakarya and Istanbul zones after the Variscan orogeny. Therefore, the latest Middle to Late Permian volcanism might have occurred during the initial stage of a back-arc extensional setting [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. In pursuit of improved rural-urban governance: an investigation of multi-level stakeholder analysis.
- Author
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Waite, Imge Akcakaya, Kaya, Meltem Erdem, and Turk, Sevkiye Sence
- Subjects
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STAKEHOLDER analysis , *MULTIPLICITY (Mathematics) - Abstract
This paper aims to examine the distinct conditions and implications of a multi-level stakeholder analysis for the governance of urban-rural intersections through a case study in Istanbul, adopting an advanced stakeholder analysis from UN-Habitat. Based on a case study of the landscape identity of Istanbul's rural settlements, the study offers multi-level definitions of the 331 stakeholders detected, power-influence matrices, and strategies that may foster balanced multi-level urban-rural governance practices in a major metropolitan area. The findings highlight the multiplicity of levels, sectors, resources, and the actors' differing capacities and interests to influence rural-urban governance decisions as well as their implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. Pluralist production of urban form: towards a parametric development control for unity in diversity.
- Author
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Çalışkan, Olgu and Barut, Yavuz Baver
- Subjects
- *
PARAMETRIC modeling , *CONCORD , *URBAN morphology - Abstract
The contemporary city is (re)produced in fragments through numerous typological variations. However, the current practice of spatial planning has yet to suggest effective control mechanisms to steer the piecemeal (trans)formation of cities. This paper argues for parametric modelling as a method of guiding fragmentary developments towards the pluralist production of coherent urban fabrics. Following the parametric definition of the basic morphological codes, the paper discusses the computational capacity of parametric modelling to simulate multiple variations in local fabrics and their consecutive integration within a larger context. The proposed model is tested in the context of Istanbul, Turkey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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12. Analysis of high streets of Istanbul: a proposal for strategic management approach.
- Author
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Tufekci, N. Gokce and Arslanli, Kerem Yavuz
- Subjects
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STRATEGIC planning , *BRAND image , *LAND use , *REAL property , *LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
This paper analyses the high streets of Istanbul within the context of high street management through four dimensions of location and movement, physical fabric, real estate & land use and exchange, and suggests a comprehensive approach to manage these commercial axes. While analysing the chosen study areas of Istiklal Street, Bagdat Street and Nisantasi District under the given topics, this paper makes use of analyses regarding transportation network, footfall, commercial and non-commercial use, prime rental values, besides a literature review to have an understanding towards the nature of each case study area. The results imply that despite their differences, all three study areas face certain issues that point out the lack of comprehensive strategic approaches to their management. Towards the high streets of Istanbul, this paper proposes a management approach embracing three main goals: (1) to constitute a brand image, (2) to decrease the vulnerability against macroeconomic factors and (3) to maintain vitality and viability of these axes. To overcome the complexities regarding management issues, this paper suggests an organizational and institutional approach, dedicated to considering the interests of all users on high streets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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13. The Effects of Natural Dye and Iron Gall Ink on Degradation Kinetics of Cellulose by Accelerated Ageing.
- Author
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Çakar, Pınar and Akyol, Emel
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL dyes & dyeing , *DEGREE of polymerization , *HIGH performance liquid chromatography , *CELLULOSE , *TRANSITION metals , *IRON , *POLYMERIZATION - Abstract
Iron gall inks have a destructive effect on paper supports due to their acidic and transition metal-containing nature. For the chemical stabilization of paper-based objects, conservation studies include both antioxidant and deacidification treatments. In order to evaluate the effectiveness of the treatments, accelerated ageing experiments are performed and changes during ageing are measured. Historical manuscripts may contain colored papers and since only natural dyes and pigments were available until the development of modern chemistry in the nineteenth century, the palette was limited. Organic dyes mainly consisted of colourants obtained from plants and insects. In this study, colored papers of manuscripts from the fifteenth century which belong to the collections of Millet Library, İstanbul were analyzed via high-performance liquid chromatography. According to the results, model papers were dyed with Rheum ribes L. (rhubarb), and then an iron gall ink, prepared according to a historical recipe, was applied to them. Due to acid and transition metal content, a stabilization treatment including alkali and an antioxidant was applied on a set of samples and after 12 days of accelerated ageing, changes in pH, degree of polymerization, and optical properties of the samples were monitored. A viscometer, a useful tool to monitor the efficiency of a treatment, was employed for the determination of degree of polymerization values. Data obtained from viscometric measurements were used to evaluate the degradation rate constants of the samples. Comparison of rate constants showed that treatment had a beneficial effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. Housing and urbanization policies of Istanbul, Turkey from central to the local.
- Author
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Can, Aysegul
- Subjects
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HOUSING policy , *FIVE year plans , *HOUSING development , *ECOLOGICAL houses ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Global economic restructuring since the 1970s, and the rollback of the welfare state in the Global North has been a major contributor to a reduction in the affordable housing stock. Similarly in the so-called Global South recent economic development has been accompanied by a lack of sustainable affordable housing and housing policies. In this short paper, I aim to analyse important policy papers from the central government of Turkey and local government of Istanbul focusing on the housing policies. I will use content and policy analysis to examine the legal and policy framework in the city of Istanbul and compare this with what is happening on the ground. These policy papers include Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality Strategical Plan (2020–2024), Turkey 11th 5 year Development Plan Housing Politics (2019–2023), Urban Development Strategy (2010–2023) and Istanbul Regional Plan (2014–2023). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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15. Between demolition and (un)intended conservation: the approach of the Ottoman state to the Istanbul city walls in the light of the nineteenth-century archival documents.
- Author
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Acar Bilgin, Elif and Kıvılcım Çorakbaş, Figen
- Subjects
- *
CITIES & towns , *URBAN planning , *EARTHQUAKE damage , *DEMOLITION , *STATE government archives - Abstract
City walls have played a significant role in the history of many cities in both Europe and Anatolia in the Middle Ages. Following the development of war technology, the city walls lost their importance as defensive structures, which led to changes in the urban patterns of walled cities. In the case of Istanbul, the city walls began to lose their defensive role after the Ottoman takeover of the city in the fifteenth century. However, the walls have continued to play new roles beyond defense, such as forming the city's physical, legal, and fiscal boundaries. The Ottoman authorities repaired and conserved the city walls in line with their changing roles, values and meaning for the city. Nevertheless, the city walls in Istanbul were damaged by earthquakes, city fires and particularly urban planning practices in the nineteenth century, as was the case in many walled cities. This paper discusses the intertwined history of preservation and demolition of the city walls by analyzing a cost estimate, dated 1894 and located in the Ottoman State Archives, which was prepared by the modernizing administration of the Ottoman State for the repairs of the Istanbul Land Walls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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16. What is the 'alternative'? Insights from Istanbul's food networks.
- Author
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Turkkan, Candan
- Subjects
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FOOD security , *SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Outside of the Global North, where agri-food systems have not yet consolidated into a 'funnel shape,' what makes an urban provisioning actor 'alternative' is not always clear. In this paper, I use members' own definitions, emphases, and arguments to differentiate 'alternative' networks from other provisioning actors. Using data from semi-structured interviews, I show that while community-building and an affiliation with the food movement (broadly defined) are the most critical features identified by people who participate in these networks, more informal, ad hoc, familial or village networks that are utilized as a response to urban food insecurity are excluded. While such exclusions may not be unique, in this case, they reflect more fundamental divisions regarding what 'alternative' implies and how to challenge the throttling hold of conventional provisioning agents on the contemporary agri-food system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Enabling widespread use of rainwater harvesting (RWH) systems: challenges and needs in twenty-first-century Istanbul.
- Author
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Peker, Ender
- Subjects
- *
WATER harvesting , *WATER management , *WATER supply , *HISTORIC sites , *MUNICIPAL water supply - Abstract
Water supply has been a chronic challenge in Istanbul since its foundation. Authorities have sought alternative methods since the Roman and Byzantine periods. Cisterns, channels and wells surveyed in urban heritage sites in Istanbul provide evidence of rainwater harvesting (RWH) as a working solution in the past. However, RWH systems have only been utilized in contemporary plans and policies very recently, particularly since the climate change crisis entered the political agenda in Turkey. Taking this as a point of departure, this paper investigates the challenges of widespread implementation of RWH systems in Istanbul through a participatory inquiry with water management actors. Challenges and needs are explored through a set of in-depth interviews and participatory workshops with representatives from water management institutions. The findings reveal that current challenges are related to planning and development, legislation and governance, financing, society, infrastructure, installation and operation of systems. The potential solution is the establishment of a governance mechanism that enables collective action among relevant actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. School as an oppressed site: how broader sociopolitical context informs educational processes in Turkish school with Kurdish school mix.
- Author
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Çelik, Çetin
- Subjects
- *
PESSIMISM , *MIDDLE schools , *SOCIAL structure , *MONOLINGUALISM , *SCHOOL children - Abstract
Reproduction theories reveal schools' critical role in inequalities and instil a sense of pessimism regarding schools' potential to create a fair society. School effectiveness research (SER) has responded to this pessimism by studying associations between school factors and educational performance to show that schools can make a difference. Despite its optimistic approach, SER fails to analyse the effects of broader social structures on educational processes. This article uses the institutional habitus concept to understand how the Turkish state's assimilative educational agenda and Kurdish communities' past experiences inform educational interactions in a public middle school in Istanbul's inner-city area. The paper argues that institutional habitus provides a more robust framework than SER in explaining schools' role in academic achievement within the broader sociopolitical context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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19. On the Ends and Endings of Protest.
- Author
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Jones, Matt and Ortuzar, Jimena
- Subjects
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SOCIAL movements , *PROTEST movements , *SEXUAL assault , *RIOTS , *HOUSEKEEPING , *DRAMATIC structure , *AFTERLIFE , *OVERTIME - Abstract
The ending of a protest is a crucial yet often overlooked aspect of the dramaturgy of politics. Retrospectively, a movement's ending is what allows for an evaluation of what it has achieved. In this way, how a movement ends correlates, sometimes obliquely, with its ends. In this paper, we ask how a performance analysis of endings might help us re-evaluate protest and its afterlife. We examine three protest movements that ended in different ways: the sharp decline of the summit-hopping global justice protests of 1999 to 2001, the repression of the Istanbul protests against sexual violence of 2019 and the late afterlives of the Wages for Housework movement of the 1970s. Each offers a different way of reading the relationship between the ends of a movement and its ending. From the heighted affective terrain of what Alain Badiou describes as "the intense time of the riot" to the subtler time of subterranean movements, our analysis of the ends of these movements aims to discover ways to build social movements that might sustain themselves overtime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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20. Combatting violence against women in Turkey: structural obstacles.
- Author
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Sahin, Selver B.
- Subjects
- *
GENDER inequality , *VIOLENCE against women , *SOCIAL conflict , *POWER (Social sciences) , *FEMINISM - Abstract
This paper uses the 'social conflict' theory to analyse the challenges to combatting violence against women in Turkey. It argues that these obstacles that are grounded in unequal social power relations are structured in the political landscape where decisions over who gets what are made. The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP)'s 'male biased' political decisions such as withdrawing Turkey from the Council of Europe's Convention on Preventing and Combatting Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (Istanbul Convention) reflect the current conditions of the balance of societal interests in the political order. Turkish women's struggle for equality requires a shift in existing conditions of power in favour of pro-gender equality forces that would enable the representation of their preferences and interests in the political landscape, which is always tilted towards certain groups and their interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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21. A two-dimensional boundary: Sunnis' perceptions of Alevis.
- Author
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Tuğsuz, Nigar
- Subjects
- *
SUNNITES , *SOCIAL norms , *FOCUS groups - Abstract
Alevi-Sunni relations in Turkey are the result of a relational process constructed from contributions of each side rather than each groups' perceptions of the other. Boundaries between Alevis and Sunnis in Turkey have been constructed relationally with the contributions of many complicated socio-political factors. This article aims to answer the question of what the symbolic boundaries between the two groups are, seeking to understand how Sunnis perceive Alevis. This aim will cast light on the nature of the two groups' relations, help us recognize forms of Alevism and Sunnism specific to Turkey, and advance existing literature on the issue. This paper's findings are based on ninety semi-structured and two focus group interviews with Sunnis living in Istanbul. Results show that the concept of 'two-dimensional symbolic boundary,' which runs along dimensions of not-knowing and not-accepting, is the answer to the question of how Sunnis perceive Alevis. The main components of these dimensions are perceptions, which seem to relate to the interpretations of group norms and values. This study, as a group-based analysis, reveals that perceived group norms – whether religious, cultural, social, or political – determine the perceptions of Sunnis towards Alevis and create dimensions of the boundary between the two groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Financialization and suburbanization: the predatory hegemony of suburban-financial nexus in Istanbul.
- Author
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Üçoğlu, Murat
- Subjects
- *
SUBURBANIZATION , *FINANCIALIZATION , *POLITICAL ecology , *HEGEMONY , *URBANIZATION , *HOUSING market - Abstract
The financialization of housing and the massive suburbanization in many parts of the world pose a plethora of significant problems that contribute to distortions of ecological balances (also known as the Anthropocene) which might reach an irreversible point. This work argues that the financialization of the suburban real estate market operates as a predatory formation. The theories of Urban Political Ecology (UPE) pave the way to understand how the suburbanization process in the twenty-first century has become one of the leading reasons of the Anthropocene. The task of UPE is to understand the political processes that shape, produce and reproduce the configuration of urban, nature and time. The latest suburbanization process has a special role in comprehending how processes and relations over the spatial configuration result in the collapse of ecological balances. This paper explores, through the case of Istanbul, how the financialization of housing market brings about a new ecological reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Seasides of Byzantium. Harbours and Anchorages of a Mediterranean Empire: edited by Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Taxiarchis G. Kolias and Falko Daim, Mainz, Germany, Romisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, 2021, 264pp., illustrations, some colour, bilingual edition, £57.32 (hbk), ISBN 978-3795436773, Propylaeum, 2022 (ebk), ISBN 978-3969290859
- Author
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Nakas, Ioannis
- Subjects
- *
HARBORS , *ANCHORAGE , *COLOR , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *IMPERIALISM - Abstract
What, however, is missing from scholarship and publications is a collective study of the harbours and the anchorages used in the Byzantine Empire. Harbours and Anchorages of a Mediterranean Empire: edited by Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Taxiarchis G. Kolias and Falko Daim, Mainz, Germany, Romisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, 2021, 264pp., illustrations, some colour, bilingual edition, £57.32 (hbk), ISBN 978-3795436773, Propylaeum, 2022 (ebk), ISBN 978-3969290859 New archaeological data on the operation of harbours are included in the following two papers: K. Manoussou-Ntella presents new evidence of the form of the Byzantine harbour of Rhodes, especially of its fortifications, and M. Papadimitriou gives a brief account of Late Antique finds from the harbour of Piraeus. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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