Siyaset Bilimi ve Kamu Yönetimi Bölümü Koleksiyonu
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Book International Gender for Excellence in Research Conference Proceedings Part 1: Selected Papers and Abstracts June 18-19, 2022(Media-Tryck, Lund University, 2023) Gonca Şahin; Selma Değirmenci; Lucia Amaranta Thompson; Tomas Brage; Sara Goodman; Mary Lou O'neilThis book represents one of the outcomes of the Gender for Excellence in Research EU project which seeks to promote the use of gender and gender theory in a range of disciplines amongst early-stage researchers (the academics of the future). Together the participants in this Early-Stage Research conference presented research from a variety of disciplines in the social sciences, humanities, natural and physical science. Their research through including gender as a concept and/or as a theoretical perspective, demonstrates how gender theory can contribute to expanding our understandings of different scientific phenomena. This project also appeals to the turn in academia towards interdisciplinarity knowledge production by challenging the ways in which knowledge is produced in different disciplines, including natural sciences. The editors of this book would like to thank all the conferences participants, the staff of the Gender and Women Studies Research Centre, Kadir Has University, Istanbul, and all the members of the GenderEx Team, for their contributions to the First Gender for Excellence in Research Conference. Lucia Amaranta Thompson, PhD Candidate, Department of Gender Studies, Lund University, Sweden Tomas Brage, Division of Mathematical Physics, Dept of Physics, Lund University, Sweden Selma Değirmenci, GenderEx Project Manager, Dr, Gender and Women’s Studies Research Centre, Kadir Has University, Turkey Sara Goodman, Retired Lecturer, Department of Gender Studies, Lund University, Sweden Mary Lou O’Neil, GenderEx Project Director, Professor, Gender and Women’s Studies Research Centre, Kadir Has University, TurkeyBook International Gender for Excellence in Research Conference Proceedings : International Gender for Excellence Research Conference 2 2023 Istanbul(Nordic Swan Ecolabel, 2023) Selma Değirmenci; Lucia Amaranta Thompson; Tomas Brage; Sara Goodman; Mary Lou O'neilThis book is one of the outcomes of the Horizon 2020 EU project Gender for Excellence in Research (GenderEx). This project has promoted the awareness of gender amongst researchers and the application of gender theory across a range of disciplines. The present book consists of the proceedings from the Second International Gender for Excellence in Research Conference, in which research projects from a variety of disciplines were presented, including social sciences, humanities, engineering and physical sciences. The research demonstrates how gender theory can contribute to expanding scientific knowledge. This project also appeals to the turn in academia towards interdisciplinarity by challenging the ways in which academic knowledge is produced. The editors of this book would like to thank all of the conference participants, the staff of the Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Research Group, Kadir Has University, Istanbul and all the members of the GenderEx Team, for their contributions to the Second Gender for Excellence in Research Conference. A special thanks to the gendersensitive language editor Liz Sourbut, and to Jonas Palm and his colleagues at the Media Tryck printing office of Lund University. Lucia Amaranta Thompson, PhD Candidate, Department of Gender Studies, Lund University, Sweden Tomas Brage, Division of Mathematical Physics, Dept of Physics, Lund University, Sweden Selma Değirmenci, GenderEx Project Manager, Dr, Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Research Group, Kadir Has University, Turkey Sara Goodman, Retired Lecturer, Department of Gender Studies, Lund University, Sweden Mary Lou O’Neil, GenderEx Project Director, Professor, Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Research Group, Kadir Has University, TurkeyResearch Project Marmara Bölgesi’nde Seçmen Eğilimleri(2023) Güvenç, MuratBu web sitesi projesi Kadir Has Üniversitesi, İstanbul Çalışmaları Merkezi bünyesinde, Heinrich Böll Vakfı desteği ile gerçekleştirilmiş ve 9 Kasım 2023 tarihinde yayına başlamıştır. Proje kapsamında, Marmara bölgesinde 11 ilde, yaklaşık 6500 köy ve mahallenin 14 Mayıs 2023 milletvekili seçim sonuçları üzerinden on iki lejant kategorisi oluşturulmuş, bulgular, mahallelerin yerleşik alanlarını gösteren bir dasimetrik altık haritaya işlenmiştir. Bu yolla; • CHP’nin başarılı olduğu dört, • AKP’nin başarılı olduğu üç, • YSP’nin başarılı olduğu üç, yerleşme kümesi belirlenmiş, İYİ Parti ve Yeşil Sol Partinin yoğun temsil edildiği, ancak hiçbir partinin belirgin üstünlük sağlayamadığı iki yerleşim kümesi elde edilmiştir. Bulguları, gerçek zamanda, yerleşim yerleri veya kullanıcının belirleyeceği kesimler itibariyle sorgulama olanağı sağlayan bu site; yöntem, sorgulama ve görselleştirme olanakları açısından yenilikler içerir. Sorgulama seçenekleri harita ekranının sağ ve sol köşelerinde yer alır. Bu web sitesi kullanıcısına, yüksek çözünürlükte, kapsamlı, ayrıntılı ve çok boyutlu sorgulama olanakları sunar. Yeni kuşak bir sayısal atlas oluşturan bu site; • Siyasi partilerin yerel performanslarını değerlendirme, • Seçim sonuçlarını sosyal, ekonomik ve demografik verilerle ilişkilendirme-yorumlama, • Komşu yerleşmeler arasında yeni müzakere alanları oluşturma, • Çıplak gözle seçilemeyen birliktelikleri ve karşıtlıkları sergileme, • Seçim güvenliği çalışmalarını örgütleme, • Siyasi söylemleri yerelleştirme, • Kampanya stratejileri geliştirme, • Vaka çalışmaları için alan belirleme, • Nihayet seçim sonuçlarını değerlendirme, yorumlama açısından açısından katkı ve kolaylık sağlayabilir. Bu web sitesindeki içerikler atıf vermek kaydıyla bilimsel amaçlar doğrultusunda kullanılabilir.Book Part Citation Count: 10Linguistic Human Rights and the Rights of Kurds(Univ Pennsylvania Press, 2007) O'Neil, Mary Lou[Abstract Not Available]Article Citation Count: 7Women's Shelters in Turkey: a Qualitative Study on Shortcomings of Policy Making and Implementation(Sage Publications Inc, 2013) Diner, Çağla; Toktaş, ŞuleDespite a long history of women's movements and policy-making efforts to ameliorate women's status in Turkey, the number and quality of women's shelters are far from sufficient. This article aims to reveal the shortcomings of shelter policy through the lens of those "at work" on this important social issue using a qualitative research design. Forty semistructured in-depth interviews were conducted with municipal administrative officials, state social workers, and employees of civil society organizations that run shelters. The research findings reveal that there is a lack of effective authority that has the willpower to combat violence against women, and that it is difficult to keep shelters secure in a patriarchal society away from the male gaze. Furthermore, results indicate that there has been an erosion of social services provided by the state.Book Part Citation Count: 6Humour as Resistance? a Brief Analysis of the Gezi Park Protest Graffiti(Amsterdam Univ Press, 2015) Yanık, Lerna K.[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation Count: 1Turkey in Europe, Europe in Turkey: History, Elites, and the Media(Palgrave, 2015) Soysal, Levent; Özçürümez, Saime; Diner, Çağla[Abstract Not Available]Article Citation Count: 3Of Celebrities and Landmarks: Space, State and the Making of "cosmopolitan" Turkey(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2017) Yanık, Lerna K.This paper analyses the (re)production of Turkey's liminal-hybrid representations through a combination of sports and music celebrity interventions on a specific landmark. It shows that a country's representations can be reinforced and reaffirmed with the help of celebrities performing their talent on landmarks such as the Bosphorus Bridge and (in some cases) placing another landmark - Ortakoy Mosque - in the backdrop. Combined with the role of celebrities, these two landmarks that have come to symbolise Turkey's liminality and hybridity visually, in a very mundane manner, aim to add a cosmopolitan component, a banal one though, to the national identity. This further shows that national identity is not always made and shaped by the citizens of that country, but rather foreigners can actively contribute to certain elements of an identity. The paper also draws attention to the role of the states in the making of celebrity politics, refocusing the attention from politician celebrity interaction to state and celebrity interaction.Book Part Citation Count: 0Active Citizenship in Europe Practices and Demands in the Eu, Italy, Turkey, and the Uk Conclusion(Palgrave, 2017) Bee, Cristiano[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation Count: 0Active Citizenship in the Uk(Palgrave, 2017) Bee, CristianoAbstract In this chapter, I outline the core characteristics of the British model of active citizenship. The institutionalization of practices of civic and political participation has been a clear objective of both New Right and New Labour governments and more recently of the coalition government led by the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats. Regardless of the ideological differences, across time active citizenship has developed assuming common patterns, with specific characteristics that put emphasis on individual and collective responsibility, on the development of community cohesion to solve specific social problems and on the provision to the Third Sector of specific tasks in order to deliver public services. This approach is not free from ambiguities, as it is argued in the presentation of the data from the analysis. Activists vindicate their autonomy, claiming that New Labour reforms as well as the recent Big Society approach have been one sided and in some cases favored the emergence of coalition groups in spite of the survival of smaller organizations. The chapter also focuses on the active participation of British organizations in European networks and at the opportunities that EU funding has opened for activating projects of transnational solidarity. Under this perspective, the chapter presents some first insights on the scenarios opened by the Brexit and the consequences of the leave vote for civil society organizations.Article Citation Count: 0Book Part Citation Count: 0Book Part Citation Count: 0Engagement and Participation: Opportunities and Challenges for the Organized Civil Society in the Eu(Palgrave, 2017) Bee, Cristiano[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation Count: 0Active Citizenship: Policy Developments at the Eu Level(Palgrave, 2017) Bee, Cristiano[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation Count: 0Book Part Citation Count: 0Europeanization, Public Sphere, and Active Citizenship(Palgrave, 2017) Bee, Cristiano[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation Count: 1Insights on the Social Construction of Europe: Patterns in the Permanent State of Euro-Crisis(Palgrave, 2017) Bee, Cristiano[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation Count: 0Active Citizenship in Europe Practices and Demands in the Eu, Italy, Turkey, and the Uk Preamble and Introduction(Palgrave, 2017) Bee, Cristiano[Abstract Not Available]Book Part Citation Count: 2The Gezi Movement Under a Connective Action Framework: Enhancing New Forms of Citizenship Via Social Media(Palgrave, 2017) Chrona, Stavroula; Bee, Cristiano[Abstract Not Available]Article Citation Count: 5Debating Eurasia: Political Travels of a Geographical Concept in Turkey(Uluslararası İlişkiler Konseyi Derneği, 2019) Yanık, Lerna K.This article reviews the ways in which various actors in Turkey have used the terms 'Eurasia' and 'Eurasianism' since the end of the Cold War. It presents two arguments. First, compared to Russian Eurasianism, it is difficult to talk about the existence of a 'Turkish Eurasianism'. Yet, the article employs the term Turkish Eurasianism as a shorthand to describe the ways in which Eurasia and Eurasianism are employed in Turkey. Second, Turkish Eurasianism is nothing but the use or instrumentalization of Eurasia to create a geopolitical identity for Turkey that legitimizes its political, economic, and strategic interests primarily in the post-Soviet space, but, from time to time, also in the Balkans and Africa. Various Turkish state and non-state actors have used Eurasia to mean different things and justify different goals: reaching out to Turkic Republics, being pro-Russian, creating a sphere of influence in former Ottoman lands, or, recently, cloaking anti-Western currents.