I am a PhD Candidate in Sociology at Koç University, Istanbul, and a Diversity Expert at the
university’s Diversity, Inclusion & Accessibility (DIA) Office. My doctoral research examines the
complex interplay between ethnicity, religion, and national identity among the Greek Orthodox
(Rum) and Arabic-speaking Orthodox minorities in Turkey and Greece. I explore how ethnicity
operates as a contested and relational category, shaped by history, institutions, and everyday
interactions within broader state and societal frameworks. A key part of my research focuses on
the migration of minority communities from Turkey to Athens, analyzing how experiences of
displacement, adaptation, and memory reshape notions of belonging and identity across borders.
My work is grounded in theories of boundary-making, symbolic repertoires, and symbolic violence.
Alongside my PhD, my current writing focuses on how youth from minority communities (Greek,
Armenian, Jewish) in Turkey understand and negotiate their position within shifting political and
cultural contexts, particularly in relation to migration, belonging, and exclusion. I am also engaged
in the field of education, providing linguistic support to students in minority Greek schools in
Turkey. This dual engagement with research and teaching deepens my understanding of how
identity, ethnicity, and religion intersect in institutional and everyday life.