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OverviewAn analysis of the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne from multiple historical, economic, and social perspectives. The last of the post-World War One peace settlements, the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne departed from methods used in the Treaty of Versailles and took on a new peace-making initiative: a forced population exchange that affected one and a half million people. Like its German and Austro-Hungarian allies, the defeated Ottoman Empire had initially been presented with a dictated peace in 1920. In just two years, however, the Kemalist insurgency enabled Turkey to become the first sovereign state in the Middle East, while the Greeks, Armenians, Arabs, Egyptians, Kurds, and other communities previously under the Ottoman Empire sought their own forms of sovereignty. Featuring historical analysis from multiple perspectives, They All Made Peace, What is Peace? considers the Lausanne Treaty and its legacy. Chapters investigate British, Turkish, and Soviet designs in the post-Ottoman world, situate the population exchanges relative to other peacemaking efforts, and discuss the economic factors behind the reallocation of Ottoman debt and the management of refugee flows. Further chapters examine Kurdish, Arab, Iranian, Armenian, and other communities that were refused formal accreditation at Lausanne, but which were still forced to live with the consequences, consequences that are still emerging, one hundred years on. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jonathan Conlin , Ozan Ozavci , Aimee Genell , Erik GoldsteinPublisher: GINGKO Imprint: Gingko Library ISBN: 9781914983054ISBN 10: 191498305 Pages: 480 Publication Date: 28 April 2023 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsContents Part 1: From One Imperial Order to Another Minority Rights and International Law at Lausanne – Aimee Genell Britain’s Plans for a New Eastern Mediterranean Empire, 1916-1923 – Erik Goldstein On the Margins of the Lausanne Conference: The Soviet Union and the Exclusions of the post-World War I International Order – Samuel Hirst & Etienne Peyrat The Lausanne Treaty in the Contested Narratives of World Politics– Cemil Aydın Part 2: Absent Presences Debates over an Armenian National Home at the Lausanne Conference and the Limits of Post-Genocide Co-Existence – Lerna Ekmekçioglu Iranian Attempts to Participate in the Lausanne Conference – Leila Koochakzadeh Arab Exclusion at Lausanne: A Critical Historical Juncture – Elizabeth F. Thompson Part 3: Making Concessions Oil over Armenians: The 1920s ‘Lausanne Shift’ in US Relations with the Middle East– Andrew Patrick The Mosul Question: Lausanne and After – Sarah Shields Turkey and the Division of the Ottoman Debt at Lausanne – Patrick Schilling & Mustafa Aksakal Part 4: Moving the People International Law and the Greek-Bulgarian and Greek-Turkish Population Exchanges– Leonard V. Smith A Capitalist Peace? Money, Labor, and Refugee Resettlement – Laura Robson At the Crossroads of History:Thanassis Aghnides, Ayrilios Spatharis and the Greek-Turkish Population Exchange – Haakon Ikonomou & Dimitris Kamouzis Part 5: Framing Lausanne Framing Pasts and Futures at the Lausanne Near East Peace Conference – Hans-Lukas Kieser Lausanne in Turkish Official and Popular Historiography: A ‘War of Identities’ in Turkey – Gökhan Çetinsaya Diplomacy, Entertainment, Souvenir? Guignol à Lausanne (1922) and the Lausanne Conference in Caricature – Julia SecklehnerReviewsThe essays collected here offer a new and important interpretation not only of Middle Eastern history but of international history in the 1920s. Professor Jay Winter, Yale University. Author InformationJonathan Conlin is a senior lecturer at the University of Southampton and cofounder of the Lausanne Project, a forum for scholarship on interwar relations between the Middle East and the wider world. His books include Mr. Five Per Cent and Tales of Two Cities. Ozan Ozavci is assistant professor of transimperial history at Utrecht University and, with Jonathan Conlin, cofounder of the Lausanne Project. He is the author of Dangerous Gifts and Intellectual Origins of the Republic. Contributors: Aimee Genell is Assistant Professor of Middle Eastern History, University of West Georgia, Erik Goldstein is Professor of International Relations and Professor of History, Boston University; Samuel Hirst is Assistant Professor of International Relations, Bilkent University; Etienne Peyrat is Assistant Professor of History, Sciences Po Lille & University of Lille; Cemil Aydin is Professor of History at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Lerna Ekmekcioglu is McMillan-Stewart Associate Professor of History, MIT; Leila Koochakzadeh is Lecturer at the Institut Nationale des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (INaLCO), Paris; Elizabeth F. Thompson is Professor of History and Mohamed S. Farsi Chair of Islamic Peace at the American University in Washington, DC; Andrew Patrick is Associate Professor of History, Tennessee State University; Sarah Shields is Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Department of History, University of North Carolina; Mustafa Aksakal is Nesuhi Erteguen Chair of Modern Turkish Studies & Associate Professor of History, Georgetown University; Patrick Schilling is a PhD candidate in history at Georgetown University; Leonard V. Smith is Frederick B. Artz Professor of History, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio (USA); Laura Robson is Oliver-McCourtney Professor of History, Penn State University; Haakon Ikonomou is Associate Professor at the Saxo Institute, University of Copenhagen; Dimitris Kamouzis is Researcher at the Centre for Asia Minor Studies in Athens, Greece; Hans-Lukas Kieser is Associate Professor of History at the Centre for the Study of Violence, University of Newcastle, Australia; Goekhan Cetinsaya retired from the Istanbul Sehir University; Julia Secklehner is a Research Fellow for the CRAACE Project at the Department of Art History, Masaryk University (Brno, Czechia). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |