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OverviewNeeds That Bind reconsiders the dismantling of the Ottoman Empire and the construction of new regimes in the decade after World War I, to understand the consequential connections that remained among the new republican regime in Turkey and neighboring French and British Mandates in Syria-Lebanon and Iraq. Orçun Can Okan examines how these new states and their people managed problems of state succession through diplomatic, administrative, and legal interactions with and between bureaucracies. He foregrounds pressing questions of nationality as they were experienced by a diverse group of social actors, men and women, rich and poor. Okan tracks previously untapped Ottoman records, now spread across multiple regimes, to investigate claims to retirement pensions, alimony cases between former spouses who became nationals of different states, and disputes over land, property, and assets held in pious endowments. It is through these types of interactions and connections, he argues, that newly emerged post-Ottoman regimes materialized basic norms and understandings about nationality—an understanding more similar to subjecthood to state authority than rights-based citizenship. With an engaging, grounded historical narrative, this book contributes to thinking historically and critically about the tangible stakes and practical significance of nationality in times of profound political change and institutional instability. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Orçun Can OkanPublisher: Stanford University Press Imprint: Stanford University Press ISBN: 9781503645424ISBN 10: 1503645428 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 14 April 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews""Needs that Bind gently but firmly displaces our understanding of post-Ottoman state succession as mostly a project of military conquest, diplomatic fixing, and political culture. We learn how, distant from land frontiers, thousands of middling state servants reidentified themselves amidst terrible battles to create new majorities--battles that remain at the heart of political struggle a century later."" --Will Hanley, Florida State University ""Orçun Can Okan has written a new and wonderfully original history chronicling the human consequences of imperial collapse. What happens to pensioners, war widows, license holders, passport bearers, and nationality as a legal category, when a state disappears, borders change, and people remain? Needs that Bind shows the upheaval and human costs in poignant and thorough detail."" --Michael Provence, University of California, San Diego ""Needs that Bind gently but firmly displaces our understanding of post-Ottoman state succession as mostly a project of military conquest, diplomatic fixing, and political culture. We learn how, distant from land frontiers, thousands of middling state servants reidentified themselves amidst terrible battles to create new majorities—battles that remain at the heart of political struggle a century later."" —Will Hanley, Florida State University ""Orçun Can Okan has written a new and wonderfully original history chronicling the human consequences of imperial collapse. What happens to pensioners, war widows, license holders, passport bearers, and nationality as a legal category, when a state disappears, borders change, and people remain? Needs that Bind shows the upheaval and human costs in poignant and thorough detail."" —Michael Provence, University of California, San Diego Author InformationOrçun Can Okan is a Research Associate in the Faculty of History at the University of Oxford. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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