umit cetin
Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Westminster. My research areas include
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Papers by umit cetin
Alevi-Kurds in the UK has been transmitted intergenerationally,
linked to their history of persecuted exclusion in Turkey and to
the transnational settlement of Alevi migrants in the UK, and how
this sense of marginalization and invisibility in the receiving
country can be addressed. Education is identified as a starting
point for the underachievement and disaffection of Alevi pupils,
which can lead them into more serious trouble and descent into
the rainbow underclass. In the quest to tackle this identity issue, a
unique collaborative action research project was set up between
an Alevi community centre, local schools and a university to
develop the world’s first Alevi lessons as part of the compulsory
Religious Education curriculum in British schools. The Alevi
Religion and Identity Project1 is described and evaluated in terms
of its outcomes, especially its contribution towards a more
positive Alevi identity as a reflection of a vibrant community
This study of the unusually high incidence of young male suicides in the transnational Alevi-Kurdish community in London demonstrates the benefits of combining a Durkheimian structural approach with a qualitatively driven ethnographic methodology. Examination of the life experiences of those who committed suicide is located within the underlying social organization of the transnational community in which the suicides occurred, enabling us to explore unanticipated events that render certain groups more at risk of committing suicide. Interviews with significant others facilitated a deeper understanding of the personal life paths of those who committed suicide. The suicide cases followed a particular assimilation trajectory that gradually positioned them in a
‘rainbow underclass’, an anomic social position leading to suicide. Despite the sensitivity of the subject, participants appreciated the opportunity to discuss their experience frankly and contribute towards a better understanding of the underlying causes in a desperate attempt to prevent further suicides.
Alevi-Kurds in the UK has been transmitted intergenerationally,
linked to their history of persecuted exclusion in Turkey and to
the transnational settlement of Alevi migrants in the UK, and how
this sense of marginalization and invisibility in the receiving
country can be addressed. Education is identified as a starting
point for the underachievement and disaffection of Alevi pupils,
which can lead them into more serious trouble and descent into
the rainbow underclass. In the quest to tackle this identity issue, a
unique collaborative action research project was set up between
an Alevi community centre, local schools and a university to
develop the world’s first Alevi lessons as part of the compulsory
Religious Education curriculum in British schools. The Alevi
Religion and Identity Project1 is described and evaluated in terms
of its outcomes, especially its contribution towards a more
positive Alevi identity as a reflection of a vibrant community
This study of the unusually high incidence of young male suicides in the transnational Alevi-Kurdish community in London demonstrates the benefits of combining a Durkheimian structural approach with a qualitatively driven ethnographic methodology. Examination of the life experiences of those who committed suicide is located within the underlying social organization of the transnational community in which the suicides occurred, enabling us to explore unanticipated events that render certain groups more at risk of committing suicide. Interviews with significant others facilitated a deeper understanding of the personal life paths of those who committed suicide. The suicide cases followed a particular assimilation trajectory that gradually positioned them in a
‘rainbow underclass’, an anomic social position leading to suicide. Despite the sensitivity of the subject, participants appreciated the opportunity to discuss their experience frankly and contribute towards a better understanding of the underlying causes in a desperate attempt to prevent further suicides.