Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 12
pro vyhledávání: '"Denise Natali"'
Autor:
Denise Natali
Despite ongoing instability and underdevelopment in post-Saddam Iraq, some parts of the country have realized relative security and growth. The Kurdish north, once an isolated outpost for the Iraqi army and local militia, has become an internationall
Publikováno v:
Middle East Policy. 24:5-33
Autor:
Denise Natali
Publikováno v:
Middle East Policy. 24:48-61
Autor:
Denise Natali
Publikováno v:
The Washington Quarterly. 38:145-164
Prior to the takeover of Mosul by the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) in June 2014, political pundits, the media, and some Kurds were predicting imminent Kurdish statehood. They argued tha...
Autor:
Denise Natali
Publikováno v:
Middle East Policy. 19:110-118
Autor:
Denise Natali, Bruno De Nicola, Hisham Khatib, Ian Richard Netton, Amidu Olalekan Sanni, Daniel Birnstiel, Usman Ghani, Samah A. Mahmood, Yonatan Mendel, K. Luisa Gandolfo
Publikováno v:
British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 37:207-226
Autor:
Denise Natali
Publikováno v:
Ethnopolitics. 7:433-443
This paper examines the changing nature of the Kirkuk problem in Iraq and the implications for its long-term resolution. It is argued that different state-building policies have transformed the Kirkuk problem from an ethno-territorial conflict betwee
Autor:
Denise Natali
Publikováno v:
Third World Quarterly. 28:1111-1129
This paper examines transition patterns in post-Gulf war Iraqi Kurdistan as a function of external aid, and the impact of these developments on relations between the Kurdistan region and Baghdad. It argues that, despite ethnic traditions and structur
Autor:
Denise Natali
Publikováno v:
Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies. 13:383-387
Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman State: Evolving Identities, Competing Loyalties, and Shifting Boundaries, by Hakan Ozoglu. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2004. 192 pages. This book ex...
Autor:
Denise Natali
Publikováno v:
Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies. 11:177-199
(2002). Kurdayeti in the Late Ottoman and Qajar Empires. Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies: Vol. 11, No. 2, pp. 177-199.