Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Chapter 1. The Kurds: Introduction and Overview Chapter 3 Chapter 2. The Kurdish Dilemma in Iran Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Iraqi Kurds: From Victims to Autonomy Chapter 5 Chapter 4. The Evolution of Kurdish Issues in Turkey Chapter 6 Chapter 5. Kurdish Politics in Regional Context Chapter 7 Chapter 6. Autonomy of Independence? Dilemmas of Kurdish Politics in the Twenty-First Century
Nader Entessar is professor and chair of the department of political science and criminal justice at the University of South Alabama. He is co-editor of Iran and the Modern World and Reconstruction and Regional Diplomacy in the Persian Gulf.
Nader Entessar is an internationally recognized analyst of Middle
East politics and a trailblazer in establishing Kurdish studies as
an integral part of Middle East studies, especially the development
of Kurdish nationalism during the twentieth century. He sustains
this reputation in this revised and greatly expanded edition of
Kurdish Ethnonationalism, adding important new analyses of the
significant impact of the Kurdish nationalist movements on Middle
East politics since the 1999 Gulf War and, especially, since the
U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq in March 2003. Entessar's
analytical acumen and insights are important for scholars, area
specialists, think-tank analysts, diplomats, military and
intelligent experts and decision makers—a must read.
*Robert Olson, author of Blood, Beliefs and Ballots: The Management
of Kurdish Nationalism in Turkey, 2007?2009*
Nader Entessar's 1992 book, Kurdish Ethnonationalism, was one of
less than half a dozen English language books on the Kurdish issue
at that time. I found it extremely useful for my own doctoral work
in the late 1990s. Kurdish Politics in the Middle East is a
significantly revised and completely updated version of his earlier
book. Entessar again provides a clear, compelling and honest
examination of the Kurds in Iran, Iraq and Turkey. Readers
unfamiliar with Kurdistan and its people will very much appreciate
Entessar's ability to eloquently describe and explain the
forest—the overall, most important issues—without getting lost in
the trees of a very complex subject. I look forward to having my
own undergraduate students read this work, as it provides an
authoritative general overview and plenty of interesting historical
details, all the while remaining very accessible to the average
intelligent reader.
*David Romano, author of The Kurdish Nationalist Movement*
Entessar again provides a clear, compelling, and honest examination
of the Kurds in Iran, Iraq, and Turkey. Readers unfamiliar with
Kurdistan and its people will very much appreciate Entessar's
ability to describe eloquently and explain the most important
issues without getting lost in the details of a subject of such
enormous complexity.
*Middle East Journal*
Nader Entessar's broadly based and balanced scholarly treatment
enriches our understanding of the Kurdish problem by analyzing it
within the context of the continuing ethnic conflicts challenging
the contemporary state system in the Middle East. The author,
however, also points to evolving solutions by ably illustrating
varying degrees of recent Kurdish political and social integration
into the various states they inhabit.
*Michael M. Gunter, author of The Kurds Ascending*
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