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E-raamat: Labelling Ethno-Political Groups as Terrorists: The Case of the PKK in Turkiye

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This book examines the impact of applying the terrorist label to a groups choice to resort to violence within an ethnonationalist conflict.

Using the Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê (PKK) in Türkiye as a primary case study, the book interrogates the socio-political ramifications of the Turkish governments decision to label the PKK as a terrorist organisation. Drawing on longitudinal interviews, newly opened Turkish and Kurdish archives, media frame databases, and casualty logs, it maps five decisive moments: the 1984 guerrilla launch; Abdullah Öcalans 1999 arrest; the 20122015 peace talks; Kobanis stand against ISIS in 2015 in a town in Syria; and the 2025 stand down. Furthermore, the studys empirical analysis and discussions reveal that the invocation of the label terrorist against the PKK places the groups actors and sympathisers in a situation that makes it harder for them to engage in peaceful means of resolving the conflict. Using four waves of interviews with Kurds in Türkiye and Syria spanning over a decade, the book offers dynamic insights into how attitudes towards the PKK and the terrorist label have shifted over time.

This book will be of interest to students and scholars of terrorism and political violence, ethnic conflict, critical security studies, and international relations.

Arvustused

"In this groundbreaking study, Muhanad Seloom traces more than three decades of conflict between the Turkish state and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) to reveal the far-reaching power of a single word. Drawing on unprecedented access to archives, media databases, and over a decade of interviews with Kurdish voices across Türkiye and Syria, this book shows how the label terrorist reshaped strategies, silenced dialogue, and trapped generations in cycles of violence. From the PKKs 1984 insurgency to its self-dissolution in 2025, Seloom charts decisive moments that defined the trajectory of one of the worlds most intractable conflicts. He unpacks how labels travel through governments, media, and international institutions, shaping not just state policies but everyday livesstigmatising whole communities, radicalising identities, and closing off pathways to peace. At once deeply human and rigorously analytical, this book challenges readers to rethink what we mean when we say terrorism and to see how words themselves can escalate warsor help end them. Perfect for students, scholars, policymakers, and anyone seeking to understand the politics of naming, this work is both a timely case study and a call for reimagining how we confront violence, identity, and the pursuit of peace.

Cyndi Banks, Professor Emeritus of Criminology, Northern Arizona University Deputy Vice Chancellor, Arden University, London

"In his book Labelling Ethno-Political Groups as Terrorists, Muhanad Seloom sets out a thorough empirical study of the impact of labelling and processes of securitisation on the development of the PKK movement in Turkey and beyond as well as its perception in Turkey, Turkeys neighbouring countries in the Middle East and further afield. Being labelled a terrorist group has powerful implications and can shape public views of legitimate protest, struggle for political or other rights, and minority communities. It allows states to use their overwhelming power through legislation, criminal justice and, at times, even the military to supress and eliminate a perceived or constructed threat to the nation, and of course, we have seen democratic and authoritarian states abusing their power to use such labels. Seloom has devoted a considerable amount of research time and energy to this long-term project, and the result is a unique in-depth insight into the particular case study of the PKK as a political movement and the processes of labelling and securitisation that shape how political movements operate and evolve. Combining qualitative interviews with participants from PKK members to Kurdish citizens and Kurdish activists opposed to the PKK content and discourse analyses of official and state documents and media representations, this book documents how the terrorist label is experienced and how it affects identity and a sense of political exclusion. A particularly commendable feature of this book and oft neglected in research on political struggles is its focus on the role of women in the PKK. Longstanding political struggles, costly in human life and economic resources, have impacted countries and communities across the world. What this exceptional book provides is a better understanding of how the main state responses through labelling, securitisation, and counter-terrorism activities affect the political movements, how they can be counterproductive in bringing conflicts to an end and instead prevent resolution. I would recommend this book to students and scholars of political conflict, womens roles in political conflict, and labelling and securitisation. This book makes a significant contribution to scholarship and should be commended for that."

Martina Feilzer, Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Bangor University, Director of the Welsh Centre for Crime and Social Justice, Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales

Introduction

1 Labels in Conflict Discourse

2 The LabellingSecuritisation Nexus

3 The PKK: Transnational Kurdish Politics in Türkiye, Iraq, Iran, and Syria

4 The PKK: From Formation to Peace Negotiations

5 Securitising Kurdish Identity: How the Terrorist Label Shapes the PKK in
Tükiye

6 Womens Participation in the PKK: From Guerrilla Beginnings to a
Transnational Movement

7 Mediating the Terrorist Label: Turkish and International Coverage of the
PKK (20112025)

8 Beyond the PKK: Transferability and Limits of the Terrorist Designation

9 From Terrorist Label to Conflict Transformation

Conclusion: De-labelling, De-securitisation, and Pathways Beyond the
Terrorist Paradigm
Muhanad Seloom is Assistant Professor of Critical Security Studies at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar. He is also a researcher with the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies and Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Exeter.