Dawn Chatty

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Dawn Chatty



Average rating: 3.84 · 69 ratings · 4 reviews · 20 distinct worksSimilar authors
Displacement and Dispossess...

3.76 avg rating — 25 ratings — published 2010 — 15 editions
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Syria: The Making and Unmak...

3.86 avg rating — 22 ratings5 editions
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Children of Palestine: Expe...

3.40 avg rating — 5 ratings — published 2005 — 7 editions
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Mobile Pastoralists

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 1996 — 5 editions
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Organizing Women: Formal an...

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3.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 1997 — 5 editions
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Dispossession and Displacem...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2010 — 3 editions
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From Camel to Truck: The Be...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 1986 — 4 editions
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Deterritorialized Youth: Sa...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2010 — 7 editions
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Nomadic Societies in the Mi...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2005
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Conservation and Mobile Ind...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2002 — 8 editions
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More books by Dawn Chatty…
Quotes by Dawn Chatty  (?)
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“In 1857, in response to the massive numbers of forced migrant Muslim Tatars from the Crimea, the Ottoman Sublime Porte promulgated a Refugee Code (also translated from Ottoman Turkish into English in some texts as the Immigration Law). Responding to the grave need to provide shelter and food for its subjects, expelled initially from the Crimea but also from other border-land regions with Russia, the Ottoman government set out to swiftly disperse and integrate its forced migrants. It aimed to provide ‘immigrant’ families and groups with only a minimum amount of capital, with plots of state land to start life anew in agricultural activity. Families who applied for land in Rumeli (the European side of the Ottoman Empire) were granted exemptions from taxation and conscription obligations for a period of six years. If, however, they chose to continue their migration into Anatolia and Greater Syria then their exemptions extended for twelve years. In both cases the new immigrants had to agree to cultivate the land and not to sell or leave it for twenty years. Ottoman reformers were eager to see the largely depopulated Syrian provinces revived by these new migrants after several centuries of misadministration, war, famine, and several pandemics of the plague (Shaw and Shaw 1977: 115). The twenty-year clause also meant that these newcomers were released from the pressure of nineteenth-century property developers, as there was a kind of lien on the property, prohibiting its onward sale for twenty years.”
Dawn Chatty, Syria: The Making and Unmaking of a Refuge State

“The motivating force behind the UNDHR and the 1951 Convention on the Status of Refugees was a desire to ensure that never again would there be such suffering as that experienced in the wake of the Second World War. Unfortunately that is exactly what is happening now.”
Dawn Chatty, Syria: The Making and Unmaking of a Refuge State

“These forced migrants were also promised freedom of religion, and were permitted to construct their own houses of worship. News of this decree spread widely along the frontier zones and in Europe as the Ottomans advertised—also in European newspapers—for immigrant families wishing to settle as farmers in the Levant.”
Dawn Chatty, Syria: The Making and Unmaking of a Refuge State



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