Crime of Numbers

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A01=Fuat Dundar
Abandoned Properties
armenian
Armenian Converts
Armenian Deportees
Armenian Orphans
Armenian Patriarchate
Armenian Population
Armenian Question
Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Armenian Villages
Author_Fuat Dundar
British Archival Sources
Category=NHG
Coded Wire
Dashnak Party
Dependable Census
Eastern Question diplomacy
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethnic conflict studies
French Archival Sources
Fuat Dundar
genocide historiography
Kurdish Nomads
Kurdish Tribes
Official Population Census
ottoman
Ottoman demographics
Ottoman Russian War
Ottoman State Apparatus
Par Ma
Patriarch Nerses
patriarchate
population
population statistics analysis
Provincial General Councils
Public Security Directorate
question
social statistics methods
statistical manipulation in historical research
Statistical Mentality
Sultan Abdulhamid

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138508699
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Statistics have played an important role in the recognition of the Armenian question on the international landscape as well as its "definitive solution" resulting in the Armenian genocide. The importance of statistics first surfaced at the Congress of Berlin in 1878, where differences in the approach toward numbers between the Armenian and the Ottoman Empire, and the role of statistics within the Ottoman state apparatus, became an issue. At that international gathering, the Armenian question was considered part of the "Eastern Question" paradigm of Western diplomacy. It would soon become a code word for the question of "civilization" itself.

Those administering the multi-ethnic Ottoman Empire perceived the Armenian issue not only through ethnic and religious perspectives, but also through statistics. As Dundar shows, statistics became the vehicle through which the Ottoman state apparatus was forced to include non-Muslim populations of the Empire in the state apparatuses and local councils. This occurred long before the Armenian question surfaced. The aim of Ottoman reforms was to ensure that all communities participated in the affairs of the state and that such participation was proportionate to their numbers. Through its role in these reforms, statistics emerged as a constant matter of debate in the Armenian question.

As a result of the Armenian genocide, the statistical record has become quite sensitive. Today, accounting for the numbers of Armenians murdered in 1915 usually means calculating the number of Armenians who were massacred or died of other causes such as disease, hunger, exhaustion, and the like during deportations or immediately after. This is a work of brilliant archival history and imaginatively uses social statistics.

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