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Extractive States
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29 September 2026

The Turkish state and the Kurdistan Workers' Party engaged in a counterinsurgency war for nearly four decades. Over this period, Diyarbakır, the de facto capital of Greater Kurdistan, was a site of sieges and ceasefires, welfare and humanitarian relief, NGO interventions and decolonial resistance—the complementary, intertwined processes of low-intensity war. War turned urban slums into high-security frontiers and transactional hubs for policy design, and settled deep into embodied knowledges and environments.
Through committed and engaged ethnography, Umut Yıldırım reveals how destruction and displacement became structures of extraction, by which the Turkish state subjugated the Kurdish population into an object to be intervened in, traded, and contained. She also tracks Kurdish efforts to reassert their own stories of war through fact-building, welfare and compensation, women's wellbeing, acts of solidarity, and environmental politics. What we see is a constant dance between war and peace, movement building and its containment, forced displacement and its rehabilitation, memory and its transmutations, environmental damage and its reconstruction. Extractive States offers compelling example of how low-intensity war transforms everyday needs, embodied knowledges, and uprooted populations into securitized knowledge—and how everyday sites of perseverance can reveal such extraction, and thus help conceive of novel modes of resistance.
"Extractive States is a brilliant and unsettling book that compels us to rethink war not only as destruction, but as an ongoing extractive project that seizes land, feeling, knowledge, and the very horizons of political life. With rare ethnographic depth and conceptual force, Umut Yıldırım offers a profoundly original account of Kurdish endurance, partisan critique, and the difficult, wounded labors of imagining peace." —Nadje Al-Ali, Brown University