ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
NOTE ON SOURCES
NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION
Introduction
I
Arabs and Arab Provinces in the Evolution of the Young Turk
Movement
Tanzimat Centralization, Arabs, and Ottomanism
The Constitution, Parliament, and Arab Representation
The Hamidian Era: Continuity and Change
The Young Turk Opposition and the Arabs
Conclusion
2
The Second Constitutional Experiment, 1908-1909
Crisis of Authority in the Capital and the Provinces
The 1908 Revolution and the CUP in the Arab Provinces
The 1908 Elections
The Arab Parliamentary Contingent in the First Legislative
Year
The Counterrevolution
Reform and Centralization
3
The Opposition and the Arabs, 1910-1909
"Turkification"
Parliament: Arabs in Opposition Parties and Issues of Arab
Concern
Unrest in the Arab Provinces
Conclusion
4
The Decentralist Challenge and a New "Arab Policy,"
1912-1913
The 1912 Elections
The CUP's Broken Fortunes and Arabs
The CUP Comeback
Conclusion: Islamist Reinterpretation of Ottomanism
5
A Case Study in Centralization: The Hijaz under Young Turk Rule,
1908-1914
The Young Turk Revolution and the Hijaz
The Grand Sharifate of Husayn Ibn "Ali
Extension of Ottoman Influence in the Hijaz
Sharif Husayn's Campaigns
Sharif Husayn's Struggle to Maintain His Authority
Conclusion
6
The War Years, 1914-1918
The Elections of 1914 and the Eclipse of the Reform Movement
The Hijaz on the Eve of War
The Arab Provinces and the Early Period of the War
The Sharif Husayn-Istanbul Correspondence
Syria under Cemal Pasha's Governorship
The Arab Uprising and Istanbul's Response
War, Politics, and Ideology
The End of the Empire and Turkish-Arab Relations
Conclusion
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
Hasan Kayali is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, San Diego.
"In many respects Kayali corrects, updates and further elaborates on preceding works. . . . The work helps us understand this critical era in the transition from Ottomanism to Arabism and Islamism."--"Arab Studies Quarterly
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