Information and Communication Workforce Forecasting: Evidence from England
In: Sosyal siyaset konferansları dergisi, Band 0, Heft 85, S. 117-126
ISSN: 2548-0405
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In: Sosyal siyaset konferansları dergisi, Band 0, Heft 85, S. 117-126
ISSN: 2548-0405
In: Ankara Üniversitesi SBF dergisi, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 1
ISSN: 1309-1034
In: Alternatif politika: Alternative politics, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 581-607
ISSN: 1309-0593
Sağlıklı bir biçimde işleyen asker-sivil ilişkilerinin oluşması için gerekli başlıca unsurlardan biri polis ve ordu arasındaki iş bölümüdür. Kamu güvenliğinin sağlanmasında askeri personelin kullanılması asker-sivil ilişkileri üzerinde olumsuz etki yaratmaktadır. Buna rağmen, ordular her zaman iç güvenlik meselelerine dâhil olmuştur. Demokratik veya demokratikleşmekte olan ülkelerdeki ordular örgütlü suçla savaşım, kalkışmaların bastırılması ve terörizmle mücadele amacıyla ülke sınırları içerisinde kullanılmaktadır. Bu çalışma, iç güvenlik ile ilişkili askerin göreve çağrılmasına dair yasaları ve askerin kullanımının nasıl işlediğini analiz etmek niyetindedir. Meksika, Türkiye, Fransa ve Birleşik Krallık örneklerinin karşılaştırmalı analizi üzerinden çalışma, orduların iç güvenlik alanına dahil olmasının mikro ve makro düzeydeki nedenlerini anlamak niyetindedir. Karşılaştırmalı analizin gösterdiği üzere, yerel veya küresel terörizm ordunun içeride kullanımı için bir fırsat penceresi açmaktadır. Ancak, güvenlik aygıtının yapısı ve asker-sivil ilişkileri örüntüsü, her ikisi de ordunun içeride kullanımının seviyesi üzerinde kayda değer bir etkiye sahiptir.
In: Sosyal Bilimler Araştırmaları Dergisi
ISSN: 1309-9302
The attempt and competition of the Industrial Revolution to find new markets brought the Danube River and its hinterland into the world capitalist system. Danube governments such as Serbia, Wallachia, and Moldavia followed a balanced policy between Ottoman-Austria and Russia in the 18th and 19th centuries. However, following the Crimean War, the region has become an area of economic, political, and military competition between France and England. After the Crimean War, the liberalization of commercial shipping on the Danube and its branches to all nations made these waters attractive to Western shipping navigation companies. The big Powers like Austria, Russia, France, and Great Britain initiated competition and risks which deeply affected the region. The research setup is on a new technology entering the region and the French capital investments and competition spreaded fort he first time through this technology. In this context this study attempts to explore the rivalries of French merchants and investors to expand in the Danube River and its hinterland. It especially deals with the steamship management attempts of the ambitious and adventurous naval officer Captain Michel André François Bonerin Magnan (Aubagne 1819-Paris 1866).
In: International journal of new approaches in social studies: IJONASS = Uluslararası Sosyal Bilgilerde Yeni Yaklaşımlar Dergisi
ISSN: 2618-5725
The aim of this research is to reveal the bibliometric analysis of the published articles on collective memory. For this purpose, journal articles published in the Web of Science database were examined. In the Web of Science database, the keywords; collective memory" was searched in the categories of history, geography, and educational research. The study material is limited to 1986-2021 as the year, English as the publication language and SSCI, ESCI and A&HCI as indexes. The data obtained from the Web of Science database were analyzed with the bibliometrix package included in the RStudio program. Related to the subject of collective memory, annual production, the most relevant authors, the most relevant journals, the number of article productions in countries, the most frequently used sources, the most used keywords in the researches and the current trends in the articles on the subject of collective memory were determined in the journal articles. As a result of the research, it was identified that in recent years, when the articles written on the subject of social memory in history, geography and education researches have been increasing and diversifying, issues such as commemorative culture, space, violence, power and politics have created a trend towards this field. It was determined that the most relevant countries for the subject area were the USA, England, Israel, Germany and Canada. In the articles written on collective memory, it was determined that the most frequently used keywords of the researchers were history, politics, identity, memory, war, place, holocaust, and commemoration culture. It is thought that these results will give perspective to researchers who plan to conduct research in this field.
In: Sosyal Bilimler Araştırmaları Dergisi
ISSN: 1309-9302
The Ottoman-Egyptian administration in Sudan received a serious blow from the Mahdist rebellion initiated by Muhammad Ahmad in 1881. After the British invasion of Egypt in 1882, the increasing British influence in the country through Egypt also made a reinforcing effect on the Mahdi movement. Declaring his Mahdiship and associating the salvation of Sudan and the Islamic world with his own struggle, Muhammad Ahmad won many of the battles he fought, increasing his popularity day by day. The rebellion, which essentially began as a reaction against some administrative practices in Sudan, eventually turned into a resistance against British imperialism. The Ottoman State followed the Mahdi movement closely, but did not want to get directly involved in the events in Sudan. Although Sultan Abdulhamid II was worried that the movement would cross the Red Sea and reach the Hejaz, he did not accept the British proposals to organize a joint operation in Sudan through Suakin. He thought that such an intervention in Sudan would be inappropriate and would harm the caliphate. According to him, in order to solve the Mahdi problem, first of all, England needed to leave Egypt. However, the attempts of the Sublime Porte in this direction did not yield any results, and Sudan moved further and further away from the Ottoman Empire with each passing day. The Mahdists won significant victories against the Egyptian-British soldiers, but the state founded by Mohammed Ahmad did not last long and was destroyed by the British after a while. Drawing on Turkish, Arabic, English sources and Ottoman archival documents, this essay analysed and assessed the course of the Mahdi movement in Sudan until the death of Muhammad Ahmad in 1885, the attitude of the Ottoman Empire towards the Mahdi rebellion, and Britain's intervention in the regional events.
In: Sosyal Bilimler Araştırmaları Dergisi
ISSN: 1309-9302
This paper is concerned with the Turkish view of the First World War as reflected through Mehmet Akif Ersoy's 'Çanakkale Şehitleri' (To the Martyrs of Dardanelles) in comparison to the English war poets and argues that the Turkish attitude to the First World War is very different from that of the English war poets in terms of patriotism and sacrifice for one's country. The most important feature of the English war poets who wrote during the First World War is that all of them, except Rupert Brooke, who died of malaria, participated in the war personally and reflected their personal war experiences and perspectives in their poems. The Ottoman Empire, which participated in the First World War as an ally of Germany, fought with the British in Çanakkale. There are many poems written by professional poets about the Dardanelles wars, in which the Turks won a decisive victory, but there is no known soldier-poet in Turkish poetry who participated in this war. Considering the poems written on the battles of Çanakkale, the first ones that come to mind are ""To the Martyrs of Dardanelles", and Mehmet Akif Ersoy. The epic poem "To the Martyrs of Dardanelles", written by Mehmet Akif for the heroic martyrs who sacrificed themselves for the salvation of their country, is the poem that best reflects the Turks' perspective on this war. This article focuses on the difference between the Turkish side's view of the war, which is reflected in Mehmet Akif Ersoy's poem "To the Martyrs of Dardanelles", from the British war poets in terms of patriotism and self-sacrifice ideas for the homeland. The perspective reflected by the English war poets was initially treated as a romantic ideal adorned with the propaganda of democracy, freedom and protection of Western civilization. However, after it was understood that the war had nothing to do with national security for England, it was just an environment of hell where millions of young politicians died in vain for the power struggle, it gave way to protest and disappointment. For the Turks, since this war meant the occupation of their lands in case of defeat, they defended their lands at the cost of their lives and did not allow Gallipoli passed by.