ABSTRACT

Due to its primacy in explaining issues of war and peace in the international arena, the discipline of International Relations (IR) looms large in analyses of and responses to ethnic conflict in academia, politics and popular media – in particular with respect to contemporary conflicts in the Middle East.

Grounded in constitutive theory, this book challenges how ethnic/ethno-nationalist conflict is represented in explanatory IR by deconstructing its most prominent state-centric models, frameworks and analytical concepts. As much a critique of contemporary scholarship on Kurdish ethno-nationalism as a detailed analysis of the most prominent Kurdish ethno-nationalist actors, the book provides the first in-depth investigation into the relations between the PKK and the main Iraqi Kurdish political parties from the 1980s to the present. It situates this inquiry within the wider context of the ambiguous political status of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, its relations with Turkey, and the role Kurdish parties and insurgencies play in the war against ISIS in Iraq and Syria. Appreciating these complex dynamics and how they are portrayed in Western scholarship is essential for understanding current developments in the Iraqi and Syrian theatres of war, and for making sense of discussions about a potential independent Kurdish state to emerge in Iraq.

Iraqi Kurdistan provides a comprehensive and critical discussion of the state-centric and essentialising epistemologies, ontologies, and methodologies of the three main paradigms of explanatory IR, as well as their analytical models and frameworks on ethnic identity and conflict in the Middle East and beyond. It will therefore be a valuable resource for anyone studying ethnicity and nationalism, International Relations or Middle East Politics.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part 21I22|85 pages

chapter 2|29 pages

Concepts, models and frameworks

chapter 3|28 pages

Beyond groupism

part 107II108|43 pages

chapter 4|21 pages

The origins of Kurdish ethno-nationalism

chapter 5|21 pages

The parties

part 151III152|119 pages

chapter 6|17 pages

The origins of relations

chapter 7|27 pages

Iraqi Kurdistan and the PKK in the 1990s

chapter 9|23 pages

Iraqi Kurdistan, the PKK and Turkey

chapter 10|32 pages

The Kurds in the war against ISIS

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion