From Fragmentation to Federation: Building the Political Architecture for a Free Iran
ARTICLE From Fragmentation to Federation: Building the Political Architecture for a Free Iran Published online by TISHK Center for Kurdistan Studies: 15.05.2026 DOI: https://doi.org/10.69939/TISHKar03 Fallah, Soraya 2026. “From Fragmentation to [...]
War, Statelessness and Kurdish precarious lives
ARTICLE War, Statelessness and Kurdish precarious lives Published online by TISHK Center for Kurdistan Studies: 10.05.2026 DOI: https://doi.org/10.69939/TISHKar03 Kurdistani, Moureshin 2026. “War, Statelessness and Kurdish precarious lives” TISHK Center for [...]
Water and Survival in Greater Kurdistan
ARTICLE Water and Survival in Greater Kurdistan Published online by TISHK Center for Kurdistan Studies: 01.04.2026 DOI: https://doi.org/10.69939/TISHKar02 Rasooli, Dawod and Evin Adin 2026. “Water and Survival in Greater Kurdistan” [...]
TISHK Interviews
TISHK Interviews is a new section of the TISHK Center for Kurdish Studies, dedicated to publishing conversations with scholars, authors, activists, researchers, and experts from the fields of politics, society, culture, and historyTISHK Interviews
The interviews focus on topics such as democracy, human rights, colonialism and internal colonialism, political violence, memory culture, language, identity, migration, and social and economic inequalities.
Welcome to the TISHK Interviews
TISHK Interviews
TISHK Interviews is a new section of the TISHK Center for Kurdistan Studies, dedicated to publishing conversations with scholars, authors, activists, and experts from the fields of politics, society, culture, and history.
The aim of this page is to present diverse perspectives on Kurdistan, Kurds in the Middle East, and broader global political and social developments. The interviews focus on topics such as democracy, human rights, collective rights, colonialism and internal colonialism, political violence, memory culture, language, identity, migration, as well as social and economic inequalities in relation to Kurdistan and the Kurdish people.
Through TISHK Interviews, we seek to create a space for critical analysis, academic reflection, and public debate. The interviews are intended not only to inform, but also to encourage deeper thinking and to promote dialogue between academia, the public, and civil society actors.
This section serves as a platform for voices that engage with complex political and social issues in a nuanced manner and contribute new impulses to research, discussion, and public awareness.





