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OverviewFor the past two decades, insights gained from the burgeoning field of borderlands studies have enabled a new generation of scholars to challenge popular depictions of the emergence of the modern Middle East. For them, the region's borderlands were not just mere sites of peripheral activity, but rather liminal spaces criss-crossed by global flows and circulations central to state- and nation-formation across the Middle East. This volume analyses case studies on Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Palestine and Transjordan that highlight the connectedness of the politics of borderlands throughout the interwar Middle East. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jordi Tejel , Ramazan OztanPublisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.717kg ISBN: 9781474487962ISBN 10: 1474487963 Pages: 392 Publication Date: 17 January 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsConceiving the post-Ottoman space less through hard borders than porous borderlands, and highlighting the interests of both local and colonial actors, Tejel and Öztan develop ""regimes of mobility"" into a percipient rubric for the mandate period. Framed by an astute introduction and afterword, eleven case studies trace how traders, nomads, priests and refugees negotiated customs controls, quarantine regulations and national churches amid competing notions and uses of territory. This is a timely study of both the disconnections and redirections that define eras of deglobalisation.-- ""Nile Green, Professor of History and Ibn Khaldun Endowed Chair in World History, UCLA"" Regimes of Mobility offers a much-needed historical perspective on the current crisis in the eastern Arab world, where states have collapsed and societies have shattered, and where the world's largest concentration of permanent refugees grows ever larger. Contrary to previous state-centered histories, these cutting-edge essays engage the bottom-up story of how Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Transjordan and Iraq emerged as states, created by the League of Nations after World War I.-- ""Elizabeth F. Thompson, Mohamed S. Farsi Chair of Islamic Peace, American University in Washington"" This volume brings together a fantastic group of scholars whose top-notch articles, based on multilingual and transnational research, provide nuanced accounts of the emergence of Middle Eastern states and their boundary regimes. Tejel and Öztan's volume is a must-read for those interested in the history of subaltern groups, territoriality, mobility, nationalism, and state and identity formation in the post-Ottoman and inter-war Middle East.-- ""Sabri Ates, Associate Professor of History, Southern Methodist University"" Ultimately, the volume provides a fresh perspective on understanding how the dismantling of the Ottoman Empire impacted on the borderlands of the newly emerged states and transformed regimes of mobility.--Arda Akıncı, University of Salamanca ""Diyâr, 4. Jg., 2/2023"" Regimes of Mobility is a welcome addition to our knowledge on the history of the mainly Arab and Kurdish mobile societies and groups in the Arab East who adopted a mobile existence between Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Turkey and Palestine. [...] Both the authors and the editors should be congratulated for crafting such a coherent narrative, usually difficult to achieve for an edited volume.--M. Talha Çiçek, Istanbul Medeniyet University ""Middle Eastern Studies"" [...] Regimes of Mobility makes a important contribution to the border literature, both because it focuses on the border construction processes in a specific historical period and because it touches on the state formations of almost all states in the Middle East.--Hakan Ünay ""Journal of Borderlands Studies"" Departing from the premise that borders move as well as people and that regimes come and go, Regimes of Mobility is an outstanding contribution to what Europeans designated ""Middle Eastern"" historical studies. This highly readable volume also provides invaluable insights into processes of bordering, multiscalar networking, state-making, mobility, individual agency, and imperial hard and soft power.-- ""Nina Glick Schiller, Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Manchester"" "Conceiving the post-Ottoman space less through hard borders than porous borderlands, and highlighting the interests of both local and colonial actors, Tejel and �ztan develop ""regimes of mobility"" into a percipient rubric for the mandate period. Framed by an astute introduction and afterword, eleven case studies trace how traders, nomads, priests and refugees negotiated customs controls, quarantine regulations and national churches amid competing notions and uses of territory. This is a timely study of both the disconnections and redirections that define eras of deglobalisation.-- ""Nile Green, Professor of History and Ibn Khaldun Endowed Chair in World History, UCLA"" Regimes of Mobility offers a much-needed historical perspective on the current crisis in the eastern Arab world, where states have collapsed and societies have shattered, and where the world's largest concentration of permanent refugees grows ever larger. Contrary to previous state-centered histories, these cutting-edge essays engage the bottom-up story of how Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Transjordan and Iraq emerged as states, created by the League of Nations after World War I.-- ""Elizabeth F. Thompson, Mohamed S. Farsi Chair of Islamic Peace, American University in Washington"" This volume brings together a fantastic group of scholars whose top-notch articles, based on multilingual and transnational research, provide nuanced accounts of the emergence of Middle Eastern states and their boundary regimes. Tejel and �ztan's volume is a must-read for those interested in the history of subaltern groups, territoriality, mobility, nationalism, and state and identity formation in the post-Ottoman and inter-war Middle East.-- ""Sabri Ates, Associate Professor of History, Southern Methodist University"" Ultimately, the volume provides a fresh perspective on understanding how the dismantling of the Ottoman Empire impacted on the borderlands of the newly emerged states and transformed regimes of mobility.--Arda Akıncı, University of Salamanca ""Diy�r, 4. Jg., 2/2023"" Regimes of Mobility is a welcome addition to our knowledge on the history of the mainly Arab and Kurdish mobile societies and groups in the Arab East who adopted a mobile existence between Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Turkey and Palestine. [...] Both the authors and the editors should be congratulated for crafting such a coherent narrative, usually difficult to achieve for an edited volume.--M. Talha �i�ek, Istanbul Medeniyet University ""Middle Eastern Studies"" [...] Regimes of Mobility makes a important contribution to the border literature, both because it focuses on the border construction processes in a specific historical period and because it touches on the state formations of almost all states in the Middle East.--Hakan �nay ""Journal of Borderlands Studies"" Departing from the premise that borders move as well as people and that regimes come and go, Regimes of Mobility is an outstanding contribution to what Europeans designated ""Middle Eastern"" historical studies. This highly readable volume also provides invaluable insights into processes of bordering, multiscalar networking, state-making, mobility, individual agency, and imperial hard and soft power.-- ""Nina Glick Schiller, Emeritus Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Manchester""" Author InformationJordi Tejel, Research Professor in Contemporary History, University of Neuchatel. Ramazan Oztan, Assistant Professor of History, Ataturk Institute for Modern Turkish History at Bo?azici University, Istanbul. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |