1. Introduction; Part I. Historical Background: 2. Turkey under European watch: lip service to democracy and human rights; 3. The Kurdish question in historical context; 4. The actors, acts and victims of state violence; Part II. Kurdish Legal Mobilization against State Violence: 5. From grassroots to transnational: Kurdish legal mobilization before the ECtHR; 6. The ECtHR's legacy on the Kurdish conflict; 7. Conclusion; References; Index.
A rich and gripping account of the challenges of transnational legal mobilization against an authoritarian regime engaged in state violence.
Dilek Kurban is a Fellow and Lecturer at the Hertie School in Berlin. Her research interests include legal mobilisation, supranational courts, the European Court of Human Rights and authoritarian regimes. Until 2013, she was the Director of the Democratization Program at TESEV, Turkey's leading policy think tank at the time. The research culminating in the publication of this book received the 2019 Erasmus Research Prize in the Netherlands.
'If the European Court of Human Rights is the world's most
effective adjudicator of human rights, as often claimed, how could
Turkey, a member state since 1954, get away with suppressing its
Kurdish population for decades? Dilek Kurban's unique study
provides not only a historical exploration of the often overlooked
role of Turkey in the making of the ECtHR, but also a novel
analysis of the limits of international courts in ethno-political
conflicts. This is a very timely book which provides key insights
into the possibility of legal mobilization in the context of
authoritarian states. A must-read.' Mikael Rask Madsen, Faculty of
Law, University of Copenhagen
'This superb study makes a compelling case that Turkey, which the
author astutely identifies as a 'perpetual footnote' in scholarship
on the European Court of Human Rights, should occupy a much more
central place in our understanding of the efficacy of human rights
law. A must-read for anyone interested in supranational
adjudication and its limits.' Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago
Law School
'With methodological precision and theoretical clarity, Kurban
provides a clear reminder for our time - processes and institutions
of law, rights and justice can possess deep failures in the moments
of greatest need. This meticulous, historically grounded
analysis reveals the limitations of the ECtHR's reach into Turkey's
Kurdish conflict and is a generalizable warning for a world with
increasingly powerful state executives and constrained societies.'
Rachel Cichowski, Professor of Political Science and Law, Societies
and Justice, University of Washington
'Dr Kurban's rich empirical study documents the struggles of
domestic Kurdish legal rights activists to mobilize the European
Court of Human Rights, as well as on the ground to challenge the
injustices of a violently repressive Turkish state. The
historically contextualized qualitative research is masterfully
executed, the book is very well written, and the multi-disciplinary
analysis of both creative bottom-up mobilization and restrained
top-down judicial effectiveness is compelling. Kurban's book is a
major addition to research on legal mobilization by subaltern
populations in authoritarian regimes.' Michael McCann, Gordon
Hirabayashi Professor for the Advancement of Citizenship,
University of Washington
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |