Jordi Tejel is Research Professor in Contemporary History at the University of Neuchtel. Between 2017-2022, he has led a European Research Council (ERC, Consolidator Grant) research project on the borderlands of the interwar Middle East. He has notably authored La question kurde: Passe et present (2014), Syria's Kurds: History, Politics and Society (2009), and co-edited with Ramazan Hakk ztan Regimes of Mobility: Borders and State Formation in the Middle East, 1918-1946 (Edinburgh University Press, 2022), and with Peter Sluglett, Hamit Bozarslan and Riccardo Bocco Writing the History of Iraq: Historiographical and Political Challenges (2012). He has also published in journals such as British Journal of Middle East Studies, Ethnic and Racial Studies, European Journal of Turkish Studies, Iranian Studies, Journal of Borderlands Studies, Journal of Migration History, Middle East Studies, and 20&21. Revue d'histoire.
Jordi Tejel's Rethinking State and Border Formation in the Middle East offers a fresh perspective on the region's state and boundary formation process during that critical juncture of the first two decades after the fall of the Ottoman Empire.--Anuradha Jangra, Jawaharlal Nehru University ""Kurdish Studies Journal"" Rethinking State and Border Formation in the Middle East studies borders and bordering as dialectic processes, in which policy and the reality of border were mutually constitutive. Empirically rich and meticulously researched, the book masterfully weaves together the macro-level of international relations, with the micro-level of borderlanders' lives. Inhabiting the pages of the book are nomads, rebels, smugglers, refugees, trains, cattle, locust and germs, whose mobility were affected by and helped shape the reality of the tri-border zone laying between Turkey, Syria, and Iraq.--Liat Kozma, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Theoretically astute and empirically meticulous, Jordi Tejel's Rethinking State and Border Formation in the Middle East deftly navigates between high diplomacy and everyday issues on the border. Tejel exposes a region long left out of conventional histories by centering the dynamism of borderlanders themselves, including border-crossing Sufi healers, silk-stocking smugglers and polyglot merchants who used Ottoman currency even after the empire's demise.--Samuel Dolbee, Vanderbilt University