Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women

<p>In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the &lsquo;informal&rsquo; Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Women&rsquo;s Committee (Roj Women &ndash; for sens...

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Main Author: Latif Tas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law 2013-12-01
Series:Oñati Socio-Legal Series
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ssrn.com/abstract=2356915
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spelling doaj-d226bb8465134826bd6c23e36accdc972020-11-24T21:29:09ZengOñati International Institute for the Sociology of LawOñati Socio-Legal Series2079-59712013-12-013611111135232Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj WomenLatif Tas<p>In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the &lsquo;informal&rsquo; Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Women&rsquo;s Committee (Roj Women &ndash; for sensitive cases involving women), as developed and practiced by members of the Kurdish diaspora (gurbet) living in the UK. Kinship, transnational marriages, frequent visits &lsquo;back home&rsquo;, and cheap telecommunications have helped Kurds to maintain strong links with Kurdish communities still living in Turkey and elsewhere in the gurbet. As a consequence of these ties, even simple disputes can affect extended family members living in the Kurdish region, the cities of Turkey, and in Europe. The Kurdish Peace Committee is involved in the settlement of such cases since, as they see it, such conflicts cannot be resolved by either British or Turkish state courts alone. Through the use of case studies, which illustrate a set of complex and interesting life stories, this article will explain how the Kurdish Peace Committee in London operates in an increasingly internal and transnational environment.</p> <hr /><p>Para entender las diferentes costumbres de los reci&eacute;n llegados y c&oacute;mo &eacute;stos trabajan en el Reino Unido, este art&iacute;culo describe y eval&uacute;a los "informales" Comit&eacute; de Paz Kurdo (KPC - un tribunal general) y el Comit&eacute; de Mujeres Kurdas (Roj Women - para casos delicados relacionados con mujeres), puestos en marcha por los miembros de la di&aacute;spora kurda (gurbet) que viven en el Reino Unido. El parentesco, los matrimonios transnacionales, las frecuentes visitas "vuelta al hogar" y las baratas telecomunicaciones han ayudado a los kurdos a mantener fuertes v&iacute;nculos con las comunidades kurdas que a&uacute;n viven en Turqu&iacute;a y en otros lugares del gurbet. Como consecuencia de estas relaciones, incluso las controversias simples pueden afectar a miembros de la familia que viven en la regi&oacute;n kurda, en las ciudades de Turqu&iacute;a y en Europa. El Comit&eacute; de Paz Kurdo est&aacute; involucrado en la soluci&oacute;n de estos casos, ya que, como ellos lo ven, esos conflictos no pueden ser resueltos solamente por cualquiera de los tribunales estatales brit&aacute;nicos o turcos. Mediante el uso de estudios de casos que ilustran una serie de historias complejas e interesantes, en este art&iacute;culo se explica c&oacute;mo el Comit&eacute; de Paz Kurdo en Londres opera en un entorno cada vez m&aacute;s interno y transnacional.http://ssrn.com/abstract=2356915KurdsKurdish lawcustomary lawunofficial courtsdiasporagurbetKurdish Peace CommitteeRoj Womenlegal pluralismfamily disputestransnational lawfeminismKurdoslegislación kurdaderecho consuetudinariotribunales no oficiales
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Latif Tas
spellingShingle Latif Tas
Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women
Oñati Socio-Legal Series
Kurds
Kurdish law
customary law
unofficial courts
diaspora
gurbet
Kurdish Peace Committee
Roj Women
legal pluralism
family disputes
transnational law
feminism
Kurdos
legislación kurda
derecho consuetudinario
tribunales no oficiales
author_facet Latif Tas
author_sort Latif Tas
title Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women
title_short Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women
title_full Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women
title_fullStr Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women
title_full_unstemmed Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: the Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women
title_sort resolving family disputes in the gurbet: the role of kurdish peace committee and roj women
publisher Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law
series Oñati Socio-Legal Series
issn 2079-5971
publishDate 2013-12-01
description <p>In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the &lsquo;informal&rsquo; Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Women&rsquo;s Committee (Roj Women &ndash; for sensitive cases involving women), as developed and practiced by members of the Kurdish diaspora (gurbet) living in the UK. Kinship, transnational marriages, frequent visits &lsquo;back home&rsquo;, and cheap telecommunications have helped Kurds to maintain strong links with Kurdish communities still living in Turkey and elsewhere in the gurbet. As a consequence of these ties, even simple disputes can affect extended family members living in the Kurdish region, the cities of Turkey, and in Europe. The Kurdish Peace Committee is involved in the settlement of such cases since, as they see it, such conflicts cannot be resolved by either British or Turkish state courts alone. Through the use of case studies, which illustrate a set of complex and interesting life stories, this article will explain how the Kurdish Peace Committee in London operates in an increasingly internal and transnational environment.</p> <hr /><p>Para entender las diferentes costumbres de los reci&eacute;n llegados y c&oacute;mo &eacute;stos trabajan en el Reino Unido, este art&iacute;culo describe y eval&uacute;a los "informales" Comit&eacute; de Paz Kurdo (KPC - un tribunal general) y el Comit&eacute; de Mujeres Kurdas (Roj Women - para casos delicados relacionados con mujeres), puestos en marcha por los miembros de la di&aacute;spora kurda (gurbet) que viven en el Reino Unido. El parentesco, los matrimonios transnacionales, las frecuentes visitas "vuelta al hogar" y las baratas telecomunicaciones han ayudado a los kurdos a mantener fuertes v&iacute;nculos con las comunidades kurdas que a&uacute;n viven en Turqu&iacute;a y en otros lugares del gurbet. Como consecuencia de estas relaciones, incluso las controversias simples pueden afectar a miembros de la familia que viven en la regi&oacute;n kurda, en las ciudades de Turqu&iacute;a y en Europa. El Comit&eacute; de Paz Kurdo est&aacute; involucrado en la soluci&oacute;n de estos casos, ya que, como ellos lo ven, esos conflictos no pueden ser resueltos solamente por cualquiera de los tribunales estatales brit&aacute;nicos o turcos. Mediante el uso de estudios de casos que ilustran una serie de historias complejas e interesantes, en este art&iacute;culo se explica c&oacute;mo el Comit&eacute; de Paz Kurdo en Londres opera en un entorno cada vez m&aacute;s interno y transnacional.
topic Kurds
Kurdish law
customary law
unofficial courts
diaspora
gurbet
Kurdish Peace Committee
Roj Women
legal pluralism
family disputes
transnational law
feminism
Kurdos
legislación kurda
derecho consuetudinario
tribunales no oficiales
url http://ssrn.com/abstract=2356915
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