The central argument and the vantage point of this article is that there is an indivisible and organic link between the economic and noneconomic aspects of dispossession or disarticulation in the state policies in Eastern and Southeastern Anatolia (ESA), without the analysis of which the political economy of de‐development in ESA cannot be veraciously understood. Nor could the region be analyzed from a decolonial lens because overlooking or negating this link hinders the pivotal aims and achievements of the decolonization scholarship: (1) excavating the significant historical power inequalities and (2) unearthing and impugning the sanitization or negation of plunder and the civilizing mission. An indispensable element of de‐development in ESA is the nationalist population policies, which, among other things, include forced displacement of the autochthonic populaces in ESA. This article analyzes the fluxes in the socioeconomic and political features and structures of ESA and describes the demographic engineering‐centered de‐development policies implemented in the ESA, which have been thus far either eluded or analyzed devoid of their ramifications for socioeconomic features and structures in ESA by scholarly studies. In doing so, the article will employ a political economy approach as well as a longue durée mode of analysis.
The Three Pillars of De-development: Forced Displacement, Cultural Annihilation, and Economic Expropriation
Veli Yadirgi is the author of the double-award-winning book The Political Economy of Kurdish Question: From the Ottoman Empire to the Turkish Republic (2017) and the coeditor of The Cambridge History of the Kurds (2021). Since 2016, he has taught in the Department of Development Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London). Currently, he is a visiting research fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His research covers a broad range of issues and areas including the political economy of development; development issues facing middle-income countries; and comparative politics of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA).
Veli Yadirgi; The Three Pillars of De-development: Forced Displacement, Cultural Annihilation, and Economic Expropriation. South Atlantic Quarterly 1 October 2024; 123 (4): 731–754. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-11381081
Download citation file:
Advertisement