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Making borders from below: the emergence of the Turkish–Iraqi Frontier, 1918–1925
Auteur(s)
Tejel Gorgas, Jordi
Date de parution
2018
In
Middle Eastern Studies, Taylor & Francis, 2018/54/5/811-826
Résumé
This article proposes to re-examine the Turkish–Iraqi Frontier dispute by observing the strategies and attitudes of local populations, in particular in the border areas, between 1918 and 1925, a time when the region became a battleground of British and Turkish agents seeking to secure the loyalties of the local community leaders. The latter played a relevant role in two fundamental and complementary ways. First, by playing different sides, local leaders helped to inform the discourse that served to justify the opposing claims over Mosul province. Second, borderlanders pushed British and Turkish authorities to come to the conclusion that an international agreement was the best solution for both countries. I argue the socio-historical process that led Turkey and Great Britain to accept the Brussels line cannot be fully apprehended without taking into account local players and their interactions with a variety of both state and non-state actors.
Autre version
https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2018.1462165
Type de publication
Resource Types::text::journal::journal article
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