Hurman, Hazal (2019-06). Kurdish Children Under the Shadow of Turkish Anti-Terror Law: Sovereignty, Lawfare and Abandonment. Master's Thesis. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • Since the early 2000s, the Turkish socio-political landscape has witnessed a lawfare whereby the total number of adjudications and parliamentary legislations has notably increased, political grievances are taken to courthouses, and public obsession with crime and disorder has multiplied. During this period of time, the expansion of the judicial definition of "terror-related crimes" resulted in criminalization of different forms of political activism and paved the way for disproportionate penalization of Kurdish population in Turkey. Drawing on the narratives of formerly incarcerated Kurdish children residing in Samanl? neighborhood of Yenik?y, a southeastern province of Turkey, this thesis focuses on Kurdish minors' repeated penalization by the Anti-Terror Law and examines its implications for the life-course of Kurdish children and for the perpetuation of state sovereignty. During their arrest, prosecution, and incarceration, the Anti-Terror Law deprives Kurdish children charged with "terror-related crimes" of the rights they are otherwise granted as minor citizens of Turkey. By placing Kurdish children beyond the law's protection, it takes the form a vertical relation of abandonment, and entitles and encourages wider social groups to punish these minors on a daily basis. As a result, prison violence exerted on Kurdish children remains unpunished, and they are denied access to diverse resources such as education, employment and housing on the grounds that they are "terror-suspects." Kurdish children also feel themselves under constant surveillance during their daily encounters with the security officials and Turkish residents of Samanl?. This web of constant punishment and surveillance reinforces the image of law-maker as an omnipotent entity, and perpetuates the state power and the lawfare by making them tangible in Kurdish minors' daily encounters.
  • Since the early 2000s, the Turkish socio-political landscape has witnessed a lawfare whereby the total number of adjudications and parliamentary legislations has notably increased, political grievances are taken to courthouses, and public obsession with crime and disorder has multiplied. During this period of time, the expansion of the judicial definition of "terror-related crimes" resulted in criminalization of different forms of political activism and paved the way for disproportionate penalization of Kurdish population in Turkey. Drawing on the narratives of formerly incarcerated Kurdish children residing in Samanli neighborhood of Yenikoy, a southeastern province of Turkey, this thesis focuses on Kurdish minors' repeated penalization by the Anti-Terror Law and examines its implications for the life-course of Kurdish children and for the perpetuation of state sovereignty. During their arrest, prosecution, and incarceration, the Anti-Terror Law deprives Kurdish children charged with "terror-related crimes" of the rights they are otherwise granted as minor citizens of Turkey. By placing Kurdish children beyond the law's protection, it takes the form a vertical relation of abandonment, and entitles and encourages wider social groups to punish these minors on a daily basis. As a result, prison violence exerted on Kurdish children remains unpunished, and they are denied access to diverse resources such as education, employment and housing on the grounds that they are "terror-suspects." Kurdish children also feel themselves under constant surveillance during their daily encounters with the security officials and Turkish residents of Samanli. This web of constant punishment and surveillance reinforces the image of law-maker as an omnipotent entity, and perpetuates the state power and the lawfare by making them tangible in Kurdish minors' daily encounters.

publication date

  • June 2019