“…Third, there is a body of scholarship focusing on religious exclusions within specific nation-states (Akturk 2009a; Katznelson 2010; Sehat 2011; Adida, Laitin, and Valfort 2016), and the relationship between religion, nationalism, and violence (Varshney 2002; Gorski and Türkmen-Dervişoğlu 2013), especially in cases where the founding of the nation was based on a religious mobilization and exclusion (Marx 2004; Devji 2013; Akturk 2015; Walzer 2015), or when the collapse of democracy or the disintegration of the polity was related to ethno-religious conflict (Sells 1996; Kopstein and Wittenberg 2010). Relatedly, some scholars discuss the links between present-day national categories and premodern religious communal categories, for example in debating whether post-Ottoman Balkan nation-states are secularized versions of religiously defined millets of the Ottoman legal administrative system (Akturk 2009a; Mylonas 2019; Evstatiev 2019).…”