Secession and Conflict

Iraqi Kurdistan in Comparative Perspective

By Zheger Hassan
Categories: Political Science, International Relations, Political Theory
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780228014249, 200 pages, February 2023
Ebook (PDF) : 9780228015246, February 2023
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780228015253, February 2023

A comparative exploration of Iraqi Kurdistan’s century-long struggle for independence.

Description

The overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003 in Iraq opened the door for Kurdish nationalists to move toward outright independence. Despite the recent visibility of the Kurds in the international media, little is known about their political aspirations as citizens of an autonomous region.

In Secession and Conflict Zheger Hassan employs a comparative analysis to explore why Iraqi Kurdistan, despite being better positioned institutionally and economically than the similar cases of South Sudan and Kosovo, has not declared independence. In rebuilding Iraq and fighting against the Islamic State, the Kurds have cultivated important political alliances with the US and Europe, which have garnered them international economic, military, and political support. Though now well-positioned to function as an independent state, Iraqi Kurdistan has vacillated in seizing this golden opportunity to declare independence. The apparent Kurdish willingness to forgo independence runs counter to the prevailing narratives about the Kurds in the Middle East. Hassan draws not only on the history of the Kurds but also on first-hand interviews with high-ranking officials, journalists, and nationalists to provide a new window into the calculations of Kurdish leaders as they navigate the complicated politics of Iraq.

Secession and Conflict offers a new model for understanding the Kurdish question in Iraq.

Reviews

“Well written and convincing, Zheger Hassan takes a qualitative comparative approach to Iraqi Kurdistan's referendum on independence and its outcome. This is an important analytical method from which future studies on the Kurds will benefit.” David Romano, Missouri State University