date: 2013-12-22T23:40:09Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.4 pdf:docinfo:title: Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: The Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women xmp:CreatorTool: Acrobat PDFMaker 8.1 para Word access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the â??informalâ?? Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Womenâ??s Committee (Roj Women â?? for sensitive cases involving women), as developed and practiced by members of the Kurdish diaspora (gurbet) living in the UK. Kinship, transnational marriages, frequent visits â??back homeâ??, and cheap telecommunications have helped Kurds to maintain strong links with Kurdish communities still living in Turkey and elsewhere in the gurbet. As a consequence of these ties, even simple disputes can affect extended family members living in the Kurdish region, the cities of Turkey, and in Europe. The Kurdish Peace Committee is involved in the settlement of such cases since, as they see it, such conflicts cannot be resolved by either British or Turkish state courts alone. Through the use of case studies, which illustrate a set of complex and dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.4 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: Acrobat PDFMaker 8.1 para Word access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: The Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women modified: 2013-12-22T23:40:09Z pdf:docinfo:custom:SourceModified: D:20131222233812 cp:subject: In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the â??informalâ?? Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Womenâ??s Committee (Roj Women â?? for sensitive cases involving women), as developed and practiced by members of the Kurdish diaspora (gurbet) living in the UK. Kinship, transnational marriages, frequent visits â??back homeâ??, and cheap telecommunications have helped Kurds to maintain strong links with Kurdish communities still living in Turkey and elsewhere in the gurbet. As a consequence of these ties, even simple disputes can affect extended family members living in the Kurdish region, the cities of Turkey, and in Europe. The Kurdish Peace Committee is involved in the settlement of such cases since, as they see it, such conflicts cannot be resolved by either British or Turkish state courts alone. Through the use of case studies, which illustrate a set of complex and pdf:docinfo:subject: In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the â??informalâ?? Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Womenâ??s Committee (Roj Women â?? for sensitive cases involving women), as developed and practiced by members of the Kurdish diaspora (gurbet) living in the UK. Kinship, transnational marriages, frequent visits â??back homeâ??, and cheap telecommunications have helped Kurds to maintain strong links with Kurdish communities still living in Turkey and elsewhere in the gurbet. As a consequence of these ties, even simple disputes can affect extended family members living in the Kurdish region, the cities of Turkey, and in Europe. The Kurdish Peace Committee is involved in the settlement of such cases since, as they see it, such conflicts cannot be resolved by either British or Turkish state courts alone. Through the use of case studies, which illustrate a set of complex and pdf:docinfo:creator: Latif Tas meta:author: Latif Tas meta:creation-date: 2013-12-22T23:39:08Z created: 2013-12-22T23:39:08Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2013-12-22T23:39:08Z Author: Latif Tas producer: Acrobat Distiller 8.1.0 (Windows) pdf:docinfo:producer: Acrobat Distiller 8.1.0 (Windows) pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 0 dc:description: In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the â??informalâ?? Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Womenâ??s Committee (Roj Women â?? for sensitive cases involving women), as developed and practiced by members of the Kurdish diaspora (gurbet) living in the UK. Kinship, transnational marriages, frequent visits â??back homeâ??, and cheap telecommunications have helped Kurds to maintain strong links with Kurdish communities still living in Turkey and elsewhere in the gurbet. As a consequence of these ties, even simple disputes can affect extended family members living in the Kurdish region, the cities of Turkey, and in Europe. The Kurdish Peace Committee is involved in the settlement of such cases since, as they see it, such conflicts cannot be resolved by either British or Turkish state courts alone. Through the use of case studies, which illustrate a set of complex and Keywords: Kurds; Kurdish law; customary law; unofficial courts; diaspora; gurbet; Kurdish Peace Committee; Roj Women; legal pluralism; family disputes; transnational law; feminism. Kurdos; legislación kurda; derecho consuetudinario; tribunales no oficiales; diáspora; gurbet; Comité de Paz Kurdo; Roj Women; pluralismo jurídico; disputas familiares; derecho transnacional; feminismo. access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Latif Tas description: In order to understand the different customs of the newcomers and how these work within the UK, this article discusses and evaluates the â??informalâ?? Kurdish Peace Committee (KPC - a general court) and the Kurdish Womenâ??s Committee (Roj Women â?? for sensitive cases involving women), as developed and practiced by members of the Kurdish diaspora (gurbet) living in the UK. Kinship, transnational marriages, frequent visits â??back homeâ??, and cheap telecommunications have helped Kurds to maintain strong links with Kurdish communities still living in Turkey and elsewhere in the gurbet. As a consequence of these ties, even simple disputes can affect extended family members living in the Kurdish region, the cities of Turkey, and in Europe. The Kurdish Peace Committee is involved in the settlement of such cases since, as they see it, such conflicts cannot be resolved by either British or Turkish state courts alone. Through the use of case studies, which illustrate a set of complex and dcterms:created: 2013-12-22T23:39:08Z Last-Modified: 2013-12-22T23:40:09Z dcterms:modified: 2013-12-22T23:40:09Z title: Resolving Family Disputes in the Gurbet: The Role of Kurdish Peace Committee and Roj Women xmpMM:DocumentID: uuid:ec10158e-dbdb-4285-982b-aa859bb143d8 Last-Save-Date: 2013-12-22T23:40:09Z pdf:docinfo:keywords: Kurds; Kurdish law; customary law; unofficial courts; diaspora; gurbet; Kurdish Peace Committee; Roj Women; legal pluralism; family disputes; transnational law; feminism. Kurdos; legislación kurda; derecho consuetudinario; tribunales no oficiales; diáspora; gurbet; Comité de Paz Kurdo; Roj Women; pluralismo jurídico; disputas familiares; derecho transnacional; feminismo. pdf:docinfo:modified: 2013-12-22T23:40:09Z meta:save-date: 2013-12-22T23:40:09Z Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Latif Tas dc:subject: Kurds; Kurdish law; customary law; unofficial courts; diaspora; gurbet; Kurdish Peace Committee; Roj Women; legal pluralism; family disputes; transnational law; feminism. Kurdos; legislación kurda; derecho consuetudinario; tribunales no oficiales; diáspora; gurbet; Comité de Paz Kurdo; Roj Women; pluralismo jurídico; disputas familiares; derecho transnacional; feminismo. access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 25 pdf:charsPerPage: 3277 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true SourceModified: D:20131222233812 meta:keyword: Kurds; Kurdish law; customary law; unofficial courts; diaspora; gurbet; Kurdish Peace Committee; Roj Women; legal pluralism; family disputes; transnational law; feminism. Kurdos; legislación kurda; derecho consuetudinario; tribunales no oficiales; diáspora; gurbet; Comité de Paz Kurdo; Roj Women; pluralismo jurídico; disputas familiares; derecho transnacional; feminismo. access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2013-12-22T23:39:08Z