Creating safe places and ensuring the safety of society is an important issue that has always been among the classic tasks of the government. While visible border security has been an important issue in the past, cyber-attacks, biological weapons or new risks caused by the nature that cross borders today and have deadly impacts all of which are difficult to control at the border and threaten security have become prominent at a global level. We have now become a risk society. The subject of this article is to methodically examine the relation between safe food and the Coronavirus which has affected the whole world by threatening the health and quality of life of humans and animals (fauna). Whether plants (flora) are outside the scope of this threat is not yet publicly known. In the case of the COVID pandemic, production activities have almost stopped in many sectors due to human presence being exposed to the effects of the virus because of its "coexisting" habit and many people dying from illness or having their tissues damaged. This shocking unexpected phenomenon, which has moved from the local to national and then international levels, has shown the need to review the things we know in terms of sustainability of life and reframe them. This national and also universal problem of how safe environments and "smart society" relations should be regulated is an issue that needs to be quickly and carefully regulated, in the "New World Order of Corona" where such Corona cases will continue to happen. Briefly, the issue of "health safety" was taken one step further and examined by taking its relationship with other elements into consideration. This study will entail both international regulations and examples in Turkey.
This research on the immigrants of Turkish origin focused on the immigrants "of Turkish Origin" who immigrated to Turkey from Bulgaria after 1980. The research was launched in 2010 and completed in 2012 with respect to the immigrants of Turkish origin living in the regions which were densely settled or in which the immigrants concerned were placed mostly at the periphery of İzmir (Görece, Menderes; Sarnıç; Yeşilova; and Atatürk Neighborhood). The subject of this study is about the social acceptances and rejections between the immigrants of Turkish origin and the Turkish citizens. Although the manuscript does not include the asylum seekers and refugees who have come to Turkey from the eastern and south-eastern borders, who do or do not have a kinship relationship with the peoples living in the country, and who are illegal and within the scope of forced migration, the social perceptions of this matter have also been noted when appropriate.
In its various aspects, the subject of "belonging" has been an important fundamental indicator in terms of understanding "social belonging relations" throughout the history of mankind. This study focuses on the Meskhetian Turks who have immigrated to Turkey since 1992. Using the selected sample below, it considers the Meskhetian Turks' choice of a preferred motherland, Turkey or their own Meskhetian Territories with regard to social belonging. The research also questions the role of Turkish Governments during the period 1992-2017 who as decision makers in matters of "immigration administration" "encouraged" or "discouraged" the Meskhetian Turks to enter in Turkey. In addition, the level of public awareness drawn by the Meskhetian Turks' recently increasing rates of arrival in Turkey along with the subject of their social adaption to local public life will be questioned through in depth interviews. Moreover, on a broader level, the emotions of the Meskhetian Turks towards spatial belonging will be scrutinized. And in the final analysis, the content of this paper examines the general question of "motherland" belonging, which is claimed to exist amongst the Meskhetian Turks both towards Turkey and the Meskhetian territories.
Türkiye is a country with lots of mountainous areas. Türkiye's total area is 782219.7269 km 2 and 583770.9139 km 2 of this total area is composed of mountainous areas. In other words, our country's 74.63% consists of mountains. 50% of our country's lands are higher than 1000 meters and 2/3 of the total area is above 500 meters of altitude. Studies have shown that Türkiye's average height is higher than the continent of Asia. Mountains are being opened to settlement in an ever-increasing fashion starting from the foothills.
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