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Social Identities
Journal for the Study of Race, Nation and Culture
Volume 17, 2011 - Issue 4
198
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Articles

Neglected middle men? Gatekeepers in homeland politics. Case: Flemish nationalists' receptivity to the plight of Turkey's Kurds

Pages 501-521 | Received 01 Jun 2010, Accepted 25 Oct 2010, Published online: 21 Jun 2011
 

Abstract

Studies of transnational political activism or diaspora politics have tended to disregard the importance of political gatekeepers in the pursuit of immigrants' and refugees' political change back home Furthermore, when attention has been given to the crucial role of gatekeepers for politically engaged migrants to negotiate their ways into host-country politics, it has often been confined just to resumés of those involved and the activities undertaken. Rarely has research engaged with questioning political gatekeepers themselves about their personal beliefs underlying their commitments to the cause. Nor has research often looked into how certain alignments and cooperative relationships between transnational political actors and their gatekeepers in receiving countries came into being, and how such genealogies might lend insight into the transnational advocacy networks and the particular types of activities that transnational political actors have developed. This paper aims to help fill this lacuna, by providing original and unique insights into the genealogy of Flemish nationalists' support for Turkey's Kurdish nationalist movement, and thus also to testify to how investigations into political gatekeepers can improve our understanding of the ways in which transnationalism materializes.

Notes

1. All translations from Dutch/Flemish by the author.

3. Viz. the Progressive Democratic Labour Organization of Kurdistan (KKDK), Kurdish Cultural Organization (KOC-KAK), Federation of Kurdish Labour Organizations in West-Germany (KOMKAR), Kurdish People's House (Mala Gelê Kurd), Federation of Students and Workers of Kurdistan in France (YXXKF), Organization of Kurdish Student Movements (AKSA), and Progressive Kurdish Student Association in Sweden (KXPK), along with TEKOSER.

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