Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in Tunceli

This article explores the uses of law in a restrictive and changing political environment. It focuses on the specific case of Dersim/Tunceli – a theatre of the PKK/Turkish army warfare in the 1990s – following the arrest of the PKK leader in 1999 and the lifting of emergency rule in July 2002. The p...

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Main Author: Marie Le Ray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-Orient 2010-04-01
Series:European Journal of Turkish Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/4249
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spelling doaj-baa3fc969dce4170b3aeb27cd015e1402021-02-09T13:42:05ZengAssociation pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-OrientEuropean Journal of Turkish Studies1773-05462010-04-011010.4000/ejts.4249Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in TunceliMarie Le RayThis article explores the uses of law in a restrictive and changing political environment. It focuses on the specific case of Dersim/Tunceli – a theatre of the PKK/Turkish army warfare in the 1990s – following the arrest of the PKK leader in 1999 and the lifting of emergency rule in July 2002. The paper analyzes how cause-lawyers resort to law in a period in which the state’s local ruling and control devices are transforming and in which the ‘rule of law’ has to be reinstated. While acknowledging the crucial role of the courts in shaping people’s perception of ‘the state’ as all-encompassing, the article underlines how people also come to learn ‘the state’ as multi-layered and incoherent by facing obstacles to legal action and circumventing them in this changing and uncertain period. It then discusses justice as a site of contention and argues that increasing levels of legal activism is directly contributing to the redefinition of the rule of law and, beyond that, of the conceptual borders of ‘the state’ itself.          http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/4249rule of exceptionlegal mobilizationcause-lawyeringstate-society relations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie Le Ray
spellingShingle Marie Le Ray
Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in Tunceli
European Journal of Turkish Studies
rule of exception
legal mobilization
cause-lawyering
state-society relations
author_facet Marie Le Ray
author_sort Marie Le Ray
title Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in Tunceli
title_short Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in Tunceli
title_full Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in Tunceli
title_fullStr Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in Tunceli
title_full_unstemmed Experiencing Justice and Imagining State: Engaging the Law to Challenge the Rule of Exception in Tunceli
title_sort experiencing justice and imagining state: engaging the law to challenge the rule of exception in tunceli
publisher Association pour la Recherche sur le Moyen-Orient
series European Journal of Turkish Studies
issn 1773-0546
publishDate 2010-04-01
description This article explores the uses of law in a restrictive and changing political environment. It focuses on the specific case of Dersim/Tunceli – a theatre of the PKK/Turkish army warfare in the 1990s – following the arrest of the PKK leader in 1999 and the lifting of emergency rule in July 2002. The paper analyzes how cause-lawyers resort to law in a period in which the state’s local ruling and control devices are transforming and in which the ‘rule of law’ has to be reinstated. While acknowledging the crucial role of the courts in shaping people’s perception of ‘the state’ as all-encompassing, the article underlines how people also come to learn ‘the state’ as multi-layered and incoherent by facing obstacles to legal action and circumventing them in this changing and uncertain period. It then discusses justice as a site of contention and argues that increasing levels of legal activism is directly contributing to the redefinition of the rule of law and, beyond that, of the conceptual borders of ‘the state’ itself.          
topic rule of exception
legal mobilization
cause-lawyering
state-society relations
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejts/4249
work_keys_str_mv AT marieleray experiencingjusticeandimaginingstateengagingthelawtochallengetheruleofexceptionintunceli
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