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Dr Hanifi Bariş

Dr Baris is currently a Teaching Fellow in the School of Law at the University of Aberdeen, which follows a role as a Teaching Fellow in the Department of Politics and International Relations (2024, 2025). He has also been a long-term member of the Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society and Rule of Law (CISRUL).

Dr Baris studied law for his undergraduate degree at Başkent University in Ankara, Turkey; and sociology for his graduate degree at Master of Arts in Inter-Asia NGO Studies (MAINS) at Sungkonghoe University in Seoul, South Korea. He studied constitutional law and political theory as a PhD student at CISRUL, where he obtained his PhD in 2018. His postdoctoral research project Council democracy as a mode of autonomy:  A comparative approach focused on direct and semi-direct democratic autonomous administrations in Chiapas, Cherán and Rojava. The project was awarded the Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship, again at CISRUL, the University of Aberdeen. Dr Baris had also practiced law as a private attorney in Istanbul, Turkey, and worked at the Grand National Assembly of Turkey in Ankara as a legislative consultant.

Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship Research

As part of his Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship at CISRUL, Dr Baris’ research focused on experiments of council democracy launched by Kurdish movements in Turkey and Syria, and two indigenous movements, the Zapatistas and the town of Cheran, in Mexico. Despite important differences, according to Dr Baris, what appears to be common to these movements is that they invoke ancestral/communal forms of sovereignty but make no claim to independence. On the contrary, they seek to reconcile their aspirations with the Turkish, Syrian and Mexican constitutions. Nevertheless, the councils and assemblies set up by these movements appear to claim ultimate authority over public affairs within territories that constitute residential communities such as villages, neighbourhoods, towns and cities. Therefore, autonomy based on councils appears to be at odds with the principles of parliamentary sovereignty.

Scholars have defined these experiments as stateless democracy and/or radical democracy. In this project, Dr Baris considered further aspects of the politics of these movements: where did these models of autonomy come from? Do they introduce novel forms of government or are they projections of ancient and ancestral forms of self-rule? What implications do these models have with regard to autonomy and sovereignty? How can we reconcile them with the constitutions of the nation-states that host these movements? What appear to be their strengths and weaknesses in practice?

Council democracy in these cases is conceived as a form of government alternative to representative democracy: citizens participate in political decision-making processes directly via convening in local councils and assemblies. Dr Baris describes these experiments as council autonomy and aims to compare them with one another as well as with the council system outlined theoretically by Hannah Arendt and her predecessors, including Jewish experiments of anarchist communities, the kibbutzim, as well as the project of Mediterranean Federated States developed by Judah Leon Magnes. Dr Baris will also dwell on the strengths and limitations of council democracy in theory and in practice and will use case studies to develop and contribute to political theory.

Awards

Publications

Book

Peer-reviewed journal articles

Edited articles

Book sections

Publications in Turkish And Kurdish

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