Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
The Turkish government mostly deems people from Afghanistan, Iraq, and other non-European countries irregular migrants and strictly limits avenues for them to apply for international protection...
- World Report 2022: Turkey
Major social media platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, and...
- World Report 2023: Turkey
Turkey demanded that the two countries take bolder steps to...
- World Report 2022: Turkey
Major social media platforms such as YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter complied with a 2020 legal amendment requiring them to set up offices in Turkey, raising concerns that they may in future be ...
Turkey demanded that the two countries take bolder steps to prosecute terrorism, end arms embargoes on Turkey, and extradite to Turkey individuals charged under the country’s Anti-Terror Law.
Authorities block and censor content on Turkish social media. A law approved in 2022 introduced a prison sentence of up to three years for individuals deemed to promote false information on social media.
Violence against women and girls remained widespread. Discriminatory and stigmatizing rhetoric against LGBTI people and refugees and migrants increased in the run-up to the May presidential and legislative elections. The country continued to host the world’s largest number of refugees; some remained at risk of being unlawfully returned.
In July the Turkish Ministry of Labor and Social Security released data that revealed a slight increase in union membership nationwide and that 2.4 million of the country’s 16.4 million workers belonged to a union.
5 Απρ 2021 · With seven in-depth case studies from Turkey, this special issue sheds light upon the changing dynamics of violence and social coexistence in countries that experience democratic decline from a transdisciplinary perspective.