Yükseker Tekin, Hatice Deniz

Loading...
Profile Picture
Name Variants
Yukseker, Deniz
Yuekseker, Deniz
Yükseker, Deniz
Yükseker, D.
Job Title
Email Address
deniz.yukseker@ieu.edu.tr
Main Affiliation
02.05. Sociology
Status
Current Staff
Website
Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
Google Scholar ID
WoS Researcher ID

Sustainable Development Goals

Documents

33

Citations

277

h-index

7

Documents

33

Citations

213

Scholarly Output

6

Articles

4

Views / Downloads

41/486

Supervised MSc Theses

0

Supervised PhD Theses

0

WoS Citation Count

11

Scopus Citation Count

10

WoS h-index

2

Scopus h-index

1

Patents

0

Projects

1

WoS Citations per Publication

1.83

Scopus Citations per Publication

1.67

Open Access Source

2

Supervised Theses

0

JournalCount
Current Page: 1 / NaN

Scopus Quartile Distribution

Competency Cloud

GCRIS Competency Cloud

Scholarly Output Search Results

Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
  • Article
    Manifestations and Drivers of Secondary Trauma Among Service Providers Working With Syrian Refugees: a Mixed-Methods Study From Istanbul, Turkey
    (Sage Publications Ltd, 2024) Yükseker, Deniz; Meinhart, Melissa; Tekin, U[ur; Tasgin, Nese Sahin; Demirbas, Elif; Dasgupta, Anindita; Kaushal, Neeraj
    This mixed-methods study explores the incidence, manifestations, and drivers of secondary traumatic stress among service providers who work with Syrian refugees in Istanbul, Turkey. A survey of 104 social workers and other providers working in 17 public and civil society agencies in Istanbul in 2018 demonstrates that 54.81% had Secondary Traumatic Stress Scale scores indicating mild to severe secondary traumatic stress. In total, 28 qualitative interviews showed manifestations and possible drivers of secondary traumatic stress including weak supervision, heavy caseloads, and insecure working conditions. The findings suggest supervision and peer-support should be strengthened to address secondary traumatic stress among providers serving refugees.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Between the State and the World Market: Small-Scale Hazelnut Production in the Black Sea Region
    (Istanbul Univ, Fac Letters, Dept Sociology, 2020) Erköse, Hüseyin Yener; Sahin, Osman; Yukseker, Deniz; Sert, Deniz H.
    Turkey is the world's largest hazelnut producer and exporter, yet hazelnut farmers have been growing hazelnuts in increasingly difficult conditions even for the years when production levels and hazelnut prices are high. In this paper, we take up the contradictions in hazelnut cultivation in Turkey and seek to show that, despite the commonsense opinion that the problem stems from small-scale cultivation, the more important problem is the unequal power relations that exist in the hazelnut market. We make the following arguments in the paper based on some of the findings from the field study we carried out in the Western and Eastern Black Sea regions in 2017. Issues exist regarding productivity and profitability in hazelnut cultivation characterized by small holdings. Hazelnut farmers are often unable to meet the expenditures and investments required for raising productivity. These problems arise more from the farmers' demographic profiles and debt levels and the unequal power relations in the hazelnut market with respect to small-scale production. Therefore, resolving the problems in hazelnut cultivation might require making changes that favor small farmers' power relations in the hazelnut market rather than enlarging holdings.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 9
    Citation - Scopus: 10
    Migrant Integration in Turkey: Travels of a Concept Across Borders and Domains of Knowledge Production
    (Oxford University Press, 2024) Yükseker, Deniz; Çeler, Zafer
    In Turkey, the concept of migrant integration has risen to prominence in both academic and policy fields following the arrival of Syrian refugees. In this article, we first trace the resurgence of migrant integration studies in Western Europe in the past two decades following the decline of the discourse on multiculturalism. We argue that the policy concept of migrant integration has travelled to Turkey as part of the European Union's (EU) externalization of migration management; however, the term has been reshaped in Turkey through a process of vernacularization as displayed in official documents, programs, and projects funded by the EU and other supranational actors, and policy studies. Although the vernacularized form of integration, named 'harmonization', has gained specific connotations in the Turkish context, this article demonstrates that it still carries assimilationist features, since it cannot go beyond the limits of the nation-state as the fundamental unit of analysis, and cannot escape from the binary opposition of native citizens and migrants. The article elucidates how knowledge production by governmental institutions, supranational and international organizations, researchers, and the civil society helps legitimate a certain understanding of integration of migrants into the host society that assumes each group to be homogeneous in terms of socio-economic characteristics and culture, and which emphasizes Islam as a common denominator between the two. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
  • Book Part
    Fındık Üretimi Üzerinden Tarımda Dönüşümü Düşünmek.: Köye Dönüş Mümkün mü?
    (2024) Yükseker Tekin, Hatice Deniz; Hüseyin Yener Erköse
  • Editorial
    Editors Introduction: Fall 2025
    (Cambridge Univ Press, 2025) Dincer, Evren M.; Yukseker, Deniz; Kolluoglu, Biray
  • Article
    Class, Migration and Masculinity Among Syrian and Turkish Youths in Working-Class Neighborhoods of Istanbul
    (Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2024) Yükseker, Deniz; Celer, Zafer; Şahin Taşgın, Nese
    This article describes the masculinity narratives of working-class Syrian and Turkish youths in Istanbul on their lived experiences of socio-economic inequalities, everyday violence, and discrimination. Based on qualitative fieldwork conducted in 2020 and 2021 with male youths in two districts, it emphasizes the common experiences of Syrian and Turkish male youths shaped by their working-class predicaments, but also demonstrates that certain forms of masculinity performances emerge as strategies to tackle the difficulties in their lives. Turkish youths' masculinity narratives display nationalism and anti-migrant discourses, whereas Syrian youths seek to affirm their dignity against racism through performances of masculinity.