ABSTRACT

This study explores the relationship between migration and political 'development' and asks the question 'how are migration movements and the expatriate communities they create connected to the possibility of enhanced political voice or the preservation of illiberal politics in sending countries?'. The thesis of this work is that politics of origin may be better understood by their extensions into transnational public spheres, because civil society, as a discursive space, may be more liberally grounded in migrant-receiving countries than in sending societies.

chapter I|13 pages

Introduction to Deutschkei

chapter IV|14 pages

Turkey, Europe, and Germany: A Brief History

chapter VII|18 pages

The Alevis

chapter VIII|19 pages

The Kurds

chapter IX|14 pages

The Ultranationalists

chapter X|16 pages

The Islamists

chapter XI|5 pages

Conclusion