13th Annual British International Studies Association (BISA) US Foreign Policy Working Group Conference, at Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, Birleşik Krallık, 4 - 05 Eylül 2018, ss.2
Abstract/Özet:
Foreign policy lobbying is an important part of the US
politics. Studies regarding the foreign policy lobbying in the US, thus far,
have focused on the lobbies such as Israeli, Palestinian, or Albanians and
their recognition attempts (Mearsheimer and Walt, 2009; Marrar, 2009; Koinova,
2011). However, Kurdish lobbying has not drawn much attention. The Syrian
conflict was a cornerstone for the Syrian Kurds, particularly for the
Democratic Union Party (PYD). The Syrian Kurds have been seeking for
recognition as Syrian citizens with their Kurdish identity until the conflict.
The developments in the conflict provided opportunities to the Kurds. This
study is based on how Kurdish lobbying, particularly the Democratic Union
Party’s (PYD) lobbying, in the US tried to utilize the political opportunities
such as the rise of ISIS and the US interests/expectations created by the
Syrian Conflict. Situated with the wider field of ethnic lobbying, it focuses
on strategic framing as crucial part of successful ethnic lobbying and as a
result, frame resonance. Empirically, this is one of the first papers examining
Kurdish lobbying in the US. Theoretically, the paper uses strategic framing as
an ethnic lobbying strategy and measures strategic frames’ success from
resonance perspective through the analysis of the Kurdish strategic frames. The
paper claims that the rise/existence of ISIS and its atrocities assist the
Kurdish strategic frames to resonate with the US policymakers and media at the
level of discourse. Particularly, the centrality of the ISIS issue in the
country and the Kurdish strategic frame’s compatibility with that perception
eases the resonance of these frames and increase the visibility of the Kurds in
the eyes of US policymakers and media at the level of discourse.
Keywords: Syrian Conflict,
Ethnic Lobbying, Strategic Framing, Frame Resonance, Kurdish Question