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ID192282
Title ProperImagined landscapes for contested politics of land reform, peasant struggles and women in rural Turkey
LanguageENG
AuthorKurtege Sefer, Bengü
Summary / Abstract (Note)In Turkey, land reform was subject to fierce debates among different political groups throughout the 1960s. Land occupations and small peasant demonstrations were seen as new forms of struggle to voice demands for land reform. This article explores the gender and class specific effects of global post-war American expansion policies on agrarian change and peasant struggle in the form of land occupations in rural Turkey. Focusing on the Aegean villages of Golluce and Atalan in the late 1960s, it argues that different political organizations imagined villages as laboratories to test their visions of land reform and the occupiers as a homogeneous class regardless of gender-specific claims. In doing so, it highlights the characteristics of rural class struggles and the politics of land reform with reference to social class and gender in Turkey in this period.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 59, No.1; Jan 2023: p.54-69
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol: 59 No 1
Key WordsTurkey ;  Land Reform ;  Political Organizations ;  Land Occupations ;  Peasant Women


 
 
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