'Regimes of Ethnicity [and Nationhood in Germany, Russia, and Turkey] provides an important and exciting contribution to the existing literature on ethnicity, minorities, and nationalism ... For scholars of nationalism and ethnicity, the book offers a robust theoretical framework for classifying regimes of ethnicity and explaining their persistence and change.' Yoav H. Duman, Comparative Political Studies
'... a must-read for students of ethnicity and nationalism. [This book] is conceptually innovative, empirically rich, and theoretically inspiring. It is particularly timely for the case of Turkey where issues on ethnicity and nationhood are now at the centre of public debates.' Ahmet T. Kuru, Insight Turkey
'This ambitious work in comparative politics promises a lot and delivers a lot ... An impressive feature ... is the richly documented, parsimonious account of each of the three countries. The author skilfully parses German, Turkish, and Russian primary sources. The footnotes themselves constitute a wealth of information ... Akturk's general achievement is to have provoked political science specialists on nationalism and ethnicity with iconoclastic interpretations of recent developments in three major countries. In Turkey and Russia more than in Germany after its landmark citizenship law, state policies on the status and rights of minorities continue to be negotiated in many important ways. His voice seeking to make sense of these ongoing processes is one we need to listen to critically.' Raymond Taras, Perspectives on Politics
'Akturk's most significant contribution to studies of recent changes in German citizenship laws is probably his focus on the role played by immigrants, especially Turkish immigrants, in bringing about those changes ... One must recognize Akturk's extraordinary skills, not least linguistic, and the care he has taken, through extensive interviews and research in primary and secondary sources, to cast light on a central question of the modern age.' Eli Nathans, American Historical Review
'Empirically, Akturk's book is impressive. He does well at combining historical narratives from three different area-studies traditions and drawing comparisons between countries endowed with different constitutional arrangements.' Survival: Global Politics and Strategy
'Based on the data gathered from archival materials, interviews, newspapers, and electoral statistics, Akturk provides a theoretically original, empirically deep, and methodologically strong argument on persistence and change in the regimes of ethnicity ... One of the innovative approaches in [this book] is the intuitive blend of historical institutionalism - mostly associated with the studies of welfare regimes - and the studies of ethnicity and nationalism. Through this insightful combination, Akturk also shows the endogenous dynamics of institutional change without any presence of exogenous shock that many new institutionalists refer to.' Serhun Al, National Identities
'... provides an in-depth explanation of ethnicity policy reform in Germany, Russia and Turkey ... empirically well grounded and makes novel and useful contributions to the field that should guide future scholarship.' Alexander Caviedes, German Politics
'... a well-conceived and well-tested study ... recommended to scholars interested in citizenship studies [and] institutionalists as well as to sociologists as a fine read.' Nur Bilge Criss, Turkish Studies
"... a must-read for students of ethnicity and nationalism. [This book] is conceptually innovative, empirically rich, and theoretically inspiring. It is particularly timely for the case of Turkey where issues on ethnicity and nationhood are now at the centre of public debates." Ahmet T. Kuru, Insight Turkey
"Regimes of Ethnicity [and Nationhood in Germany, Russia, and Turkey] provides an important and exciting contribution to the existing literature on ethnicity, minorities, and nationalism ... For scholars of nationalism and ethnicity, the book offers a robust theoretical framework for classifying regimes of ethnicity and explaining their persistence and change ... This book not only addresses an issue area that has not been studied by historical institutionalists but also offers a theory of endogenous institutional change which constitutes an under theorized aspect of historical institutionalism." Yoav H. Duman, Comparative Political Studies
"This ambitious work in comparative politics promises a lot and delivers a lot ... An impressive feature ... is the richly documented, parsimonious account of each of the three countries. The author skilfully parses German, Turkish, and Russian primary sources. The footnotes themselves constitute a wealth of information ... Akturk's general achievement is to have provoked political science specialists on nationalism and ethnicity with iconoclastic interpretations of recent developments in three major countries. In Turkey and Russia more than in Germany after its landmark citizenship law, state policies on the status and rights of minorities continue to be negotiated in many important ways. His voice seeking to make sense of these ongoing processes is one we need to listen to critically." Raymond Taras, Perspectives on Politics
"Akturk's most significant contribution to studies of recent changes in German citizenship laws is probably his focus on the role played by immigrants, especially Turkish immigrants, in bringing about those changes ... One must recognize Akturk's extraordinary skills, not least linguistic, and the care he has taken, through extensive interviews and research in primary and secondary sources, to cast light on a central question of the modern age." Eli Nathans, American Historical Review
"Empirically, Akturk's book is impressive. He does well at combining historical narratives from three different area-studies traditions and drawing comparisons between countries endowed with different constitutional arrangements." Survival: Global Politics and Strategy
"Based on the data gathered from archival materials, interviews, newspapers, and electoral statistics, Akturk provides a theoretically original, empirically deep, and methodologically strong argument on persistence and change in the regimes of ethnicity ... One of the innovative approaches in [this book] is the intuitive blend of historical institutionalism - mostly associated with the studies of welfare regimes - and the studies of ethnicity and nationalism. Through this insightful combination, Akturk also shows the endogenous dynamics of institutional change without any presence of exogenous shock that many new institutionalists refer to." Serhun Al, National Identities
"... provides an in-depth explanation of ethnicity policy reform in Germany, Russia and Turkey ... empirically well grounded and makes novel and useful contributions to the field that should guide future scholarship." Alexander Caviedes, German Politics
"... a well-conceived and well-tested study ... recommended to scholars interested in citizenship studies [and] institutionalists as well as to sociologists as a fine read." Nur Bilge Criss, Turkish Studies