Edinburgh Law School doctoral researcher publishes new article on Kurdistan and the Sèvres centenary
Tue 28 September 2021
A new article titled "Kurdistan on the Sèvres Centenary: How a Distinct People Became the World’s Largest Stateless Nation" by Edinburgh Law School PhD candidate, Loqman Radpey, has been published in Nationalities Papers by the Cambridge University Press.
Loqman Radpey is a doctoral researcher at Edinburgh Law School and a research member of the ECIGL. He has particularly focused on peopleness, self-determination, secession and statehood. Since 2013, he has studied and written about Kurdish self-determination and statehood, self-determination and the Kurds, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Rojava’s democratic confederalism, and the legal status of the Kurdish territories in international law.
Abstract
In August 1920, the political fate of the Kurdish nation, along with its territory, Kurdistan, were on the line, after the Allies asserted their interest in national rights to self-determination following World War I. Under the Treaty of Sèvres, Kurds were acknowledged as an ethno-political entity in the Wilsonian perspective, yet the ideal of self-determination failed to crystallize as a full legal right to independent nationhood. Thus, Kurdish statehood was annulled. In contrast, the drawing of states’ boundaries in Europe took place mostly along national lines. The result has been an untenable diversity across regions affected by the War in the varieties of self-determination, arguing that some peoples’ nationhood was credited with less legitimacy than others. The departure of imperial powers and subsequently the League of Nations from self-determination for achieving territorial independence came as a result of imperialist world policies to reorder political influence. With the adoption of self-determination as one of the purposes of the UN in 1945, and with the crystallization of self-determination as a legal right in 1966 and the subsequent campaign of decolonization, it could be argued the Kurds’ status was not repositioned and in some way is invisible to the law of self-determination, as applied.
Radpey, L. (2021). Kurdistan on the Sèvres Centenary: How a Distinct People Became the World’s Largest Stateless Nation. Nationalities Papers, 1-30. View article