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Notes on Contributors

In: Population Displacements and Multiple Mobilities in the Late Ottoman Empire
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Notes on Contributors

Ozan Arslan

Ph.D. (2011), University Montpellier III, is lecturer of European and Near Eastern Diplomatic History at the department of Political Science and International Relations of Izmir University of Economics. He has published on diplomatic and military history of the Ottoman Empire and the Caucasus in World War I, most recently “Men, Ships and Arms to the Sultan: German Military Mission and Transfer of Personnel, Vessels, and Weapons to the Ottoman Army and Navy during World War I” in Gunpowder, Gold, and Steel. Military-Technical Cooperation during World War I (Saint Petersburg: Izdatel’stvo RKHGA, 2018).

Catherine Brégianni

PhD from Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, Research Director at the Modern Greek History Research Center of the Academy of Athens. Her research focuses mainly on market mechanisms, in relation to the evolution of the global monetary systems from the perspective of the history of international institutions. Last monograph: From the Greek Revolution to the forced exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey. Representations of the 1821 during the interwar period (Athens: Alfeios, in Greek, 2022). Most recent publication: “Forced Population Exchange, Spatial Conceptions and the Agency of International Institutions. League of Nations, Refugee Settlement Commission and Banking Networks in Northern Greece during the Interwar Period’’, in Catherine Brégianni, and R. Cussό eds., Shaping and Reshaping the Global Monetary Order. During the Interwar Period and Beyond (Athens: Alfeios, 2023), 25–69.

Renaud Dorlhiac

Research-associate at CETOBAC, EHESS-Paris and teaching-assistant at the Institute of Political Studies (IEP Toulouse). He has notably published on national engineering and First world war military occupations, most recently « Frontière nationale, régionale, fédérale, impériale ? L’établissement de la frontière albano-yougoslave », in Laloux, Dessberg, Palaude (ed.), Frontières en Europe depuis le Congrès de Vienne (1815) (Valenciennes: Presses Universitaires de Valenciennes, 2020).

Simone Egger

Ph.D. (2012), Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich, is assistant professor for cultural analysis at Klagenfurt University. She is an expert in urban anthropology – München wird moderner. Stadt und Atmosphäre in den langen 1960er Jahren (Bielefeld: Transcript, 2013) – and works on women’s biographies (project Dorf der Frauen 2021).

Bat-Zion Eraqi Klorman

Ph.D. (1981), University of California at Los Angeles, is a Professor of History at the Open University of Israel. Her fields of research include History and Culture of the Jews in the Muslim world, especially in Yemen, and Mizrahi Jews in Palestine and in Israel. Among her books: Traditional Society in Transition: The Yemeni Jewish Experience, (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2014).

Catherine Horel

Ph.D. (1993), Senior research fellow, CETOBAC-CNRS, Paris, specializes in Central European contemporary history, Habsburg Empire, Jewish, urban and military history. Among her latest publications: L’amiral Horthy, regent de Hongrie (Paris: Perrin, 2014); Histoire de la nation hongroise (Paris: Tallandier, 2021), Multicultural Cities of the Habsburg Empire. Imagined Communities and Conflictual Encounters 1880–1914 (forthcoming at CEU Press, 2023).

George Kalpadakis

Ph.D. (2009), is a Senior Researcher in Foreign Policy at the Modern Greek History Research Center of the Academy of Athens (KEINE). In 2023–2024 he will be a Lewis-Gibson Fellow at the University of Cambridge. He has been a Fulbright Scholar at Harvard University (2021-2022) and a Visiting Scholar at the University of Cambridge (2015–2017). He has worked on Southeast European politics, policy and institution-building. His latest publications include The Cyprus conflict, 1954–1974 (Athens: Papazissis 2021) and The Balkan confederation of Ioannis Kapodistrias (Athens: SOV 2023).

Denis Ljuljanović

Ph.D. (2021), Justus-Liebig University of Giessen/Germany, and Marmara University/Turkey. His research explores social and cultural history in the Ottoman Empire, migrations, micropolitics and microhistory, transnational and entangled history. In his research, he applies a bottom-up perspective of ordinary life in order to bring the greater visibility and understanding of the actors who have been overlooked and neglected in the past. He is currently working on his upcoming manuscript Imagining Macedonia in the Age of Empire: State Policies, Networks and Violence (1878–1912).

Nicole Immig

Ph.D. (2013), is Professor of South-Eastern European History at Justus-Liebig University of Giessen/Germany. Her publications deal with (hi)stories of migrations, the visual culture of South-Eastern Europe, history of media and the periodical press, the Balkan Front in World War One and labor migration in Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia.

Stefan Rohdewald

Ph.D. (2004), University of Zurich, is Professor for Eastern and South Eastern European History at the University of Leipzig. He has published on Russian/ Polish-Lithuanian urban history and heads a priority programme financed by the German Research Foundation on Transottoman mobility dynamics. His most recent book: Sacralizing the Nation through Remembrance of Medieval Religious Figures in Serbia, Bulgaria and Macedonia (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2022).

Bettina Severin-Barboutie

Ph.D. (2004), Professor of Contemporary History at University Clermont Auvergne and associated member of the research lab “Arts, civilisation, histoire de l’Europe” at the University of Strasbourg, specializes in contemporary history. Among her latest publications: Migration als Bewegung am Beispiel der Städte Stuttgart und Lyon nach 1945 (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2019), Représentation et mémoire de la migration/Repräsentation und Erinnerung der Migration, ed. with Dirk Rupnow et al. (Innsbruck: IUP, 2021).

Sarah Shields

Ph.D. (1986), University of Chicago, is Professor of History at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She has published on the history of the late Ottoman and interwar Middle East, most recently Fezzes in the River: Identity Politics and European Diplomacy in the Middle East on the Eve of World War II (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).

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Population Displacements and Multiple Mobilities in the Late Ottoman Empire

Series:  The Ottoman Empire and its Heritage, Volume: 77
Cover Population Displacements and Multiple Mobilities in the Late Ottoman Empire
E-Book ISBN:
9789004543690
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
18 May 2023
  • Subjects
    • Ancient Near East and Egypt
      • History
    • History
      • History of Warfare
      • Migration History
    • Middle East and Islamic Studies
      • Ottoman & Turkish Studies
    • Slavic and Eurasian Studies
      • History
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Copyright Page
Preface
Figures and Table
Notes on Contributors
Chapter 1 Introduction: Population Displacements and Multiple Mobilities in the Late Ottoman Empire
Part 1 Population Movements and Migrants as Assets
Chapter 2 Demographic Engineering and the Unionist Legacy
Chapter 3 Seeking a Homeland, Serving the Empire: Muslim Migrants from Montenegro and Their Integration within the Ottoman Bureaucracy (1870–1914)
Part 2 Differentiating and Hierarchizing People on the Move
Chapter 4 Muslims of Epirus, Muslims of Empire? The Cham Issue in Relation to Albanian, Greek and Turkish National Projects (1908–25)
Chapter 5 ‘Unreliable Muslims’ out and ‘Loyal Subjects of the Tsar’ in?: Two Different Forms of Migration Envisaged by the Russian Authorities in the Southwestern Caucasus and Eastern Anatolia in World War I
Part 3 Reinterpreting Population Displacements
Chapter 6 The Ottoman Era in Yemen and Jewish Emigration (1881–1914)
Chapter 7 Flags and Blood: European Jews, Refugee Restrictions, and Rioting in 1929 Palestine
Part 4 Lives beyond Borders
Chapter 8 Migrating Economic Identities in the Ottoman Empire: Regional Expressions of the Global Market in the Greek Banker’s Andreas Syngros Autobiography
Chapter 9 Mapping Europe with Love: Spaces and Conjunctions between Smyrna and Munich
Chapter 10 Afterword: Transitions from a Transimperial to a Transnational Migration Society
Back Matter
Index of Names

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