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ID152610
Title ProperLegal notion of nationality in the Turkish Republic
Other Title Informationfrom Ottoman legacy to modern aberrations
LanguageENG
AuthorÖktem, Emre
Summary / Abstract (Note)Shortly after its emergence, the Turkish Republic adopted legislation inspired by European legal systems and traditions, including a law on nationality. The implementation of this law was affected by the staunchly nationalistic early republican policies which were not immune from the influence of the concept of ‘race’, as well as by the Ottoman legal conceptions on nationality based on religion, both of which guided the application of the new laws by the judiciary and the administration. This article proposes a critical legal approach to the issue of Turkish nationality, based on historical reflections. After a survey on the laws on nationality since the foundation of the Republic, it addresses the major confusions in connection with the concept of nationality in the light of textbooks from the relevant period, in order to observe, in conclusion, inherent and insolvable inconsistencies within the law, and a tenacious survival of Ottoman conceptions within the current law on nationality, especially with regard to religious minorities, which are assimilated to dhimmis in the legal subconscious and often equated to foreigners in practice.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 53, No.4; Jul 2017: p.638-655
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies 2017-08 53, 4
Key WordsOttoman Legacy ;  Turkish Republic ;  Legal Notion of Nationality ;  Modern Aberrations