Alexis Heraclides (born 1952 in Alexandria, Egypt) is a Greek political scientist and public intellectual, currently Professor Emeritus of International Relations at the Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences. He is the son of ambassador Dimitris Heraclides and dentist Zina Ficardou. He taught at Panteion University from 1993 onwards, from 2004 until 2019 as Professor of International Relations and conflict resolution.
He has served as counselor on minorities and human rights in the Greek Foreign Ministry (1983-1997) and was also appointed as Greek Alternate Expert of the UN Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities in the UN Commission on Human Rights (1990-1992).
He has written hundreds of articles in Greek dailies and magazines (many of which have been republished in Greek Cypriot and Turkish newspapers) on minority issues, the resolution of the Cyprus problem (via a loose consociational bicommunal federation), the amelioration of Greek-Turkish relations and the comprehensive settlement of the pending Aegean dispute, the settlement of the vexing “Macedonian Question” between Athens and Skopje, and on Greek and Greek-Cypriot nationalism. On these issues he has also participated within various NGOs in Greece and Cyprus ("The Front for Reason Against Nationalism", "Centre of Minority Groups", "Cyprus Academic Dialogue" and others).[1]
In 1997 he was awarded the Abdi Ipekçi Peace and Friendship Prize for his newspaper articles on the resolution of the Greek-Turkish conflict. His repeated criticism of nationalism in Greece and in the Republic of Cyprus has earned him the opprobrium of key nationalist figures in both countries, and he has been repeatedly attacked in the conservative Greek and Cypriot press and by ultra-nationalist political parties (inter alia in the Greek Parliament) and organizations in Greece and Cyprus from mid-1990s until today (see e.g.Greek Helsinki Monitor, press release, 2 May 2009. See e.g. the attack in To Proto Thema (Greek Sunday newspaper) 29 March 2009, 5 April 2009, 12 April 2009, and Eleftherotypia (Greek newspaper) 25 April 2009. The attacks are also referred in Radikal (Turkish newspaper) 30 March 2009 and 28 June 2009).
Views
As counselor on human rights and minorities, he was preoccupied with the Muslim/Turkish minority in Western Thrace and was instrumental in persuading the Greek side to abandon its discrimination towards the minority in question.[2]
Regarding the Macedonian dispute, Heraclides said in 2019 that the Prespa agreement was "good" for Greece, but less so for North Macedonia [5]
In 2022, Heraclides gave an interview to the Turkish state-run Anadolu Agency,[6] in which he said regarding the Aegean dispute that Greece should recognize the "rights" and "interests of Turkey in the Aegean Sea.[7] This statement drew criticism from some Greek media, in which he was denounced as a propagandist for Turkish interests.[7][8][9] In his books and articles on Greek-Turkish relations and in interviews he has argued again and again that Turkey is not "aggressive" towards Greece,.[10] He has also claimed that the Turkish casus belli against Greece, which was declared in 1995 by the Turkish parliament that unilateral action over territorial waters by Greece would constitute a reason for war)[11] may be a threat of violence but need not be taken literally.[9][12]
Heraclides has also argued that the mass killings and expulsions of Greeks in 1922, committed by the Kemalist government, was not a genocide and instead ethnic cleansing. For example, he said that the Burning of Smyrna wasn't an act of genocide because "it had been preceded (and caused) by a regular war between the Greek army and Kemal's nationalist forces.[13] Historian Erik Sjöberg explicitly criticized these assertions, stating that: "Heraclides' core argument was problematic, resting as it did in a somewhat misguided assumption of war and genocide as mutually excluding".[13] In 2006, he wrote an article regarding Armenian genocide denial in France, in which he defended it on freedom of expression grounds, and stated that its criminalization was "ahistorical" and was pushed by the "Armenian lobby of France" in order to stop the accession of Turkey to the European Union.[14] Nevertheless, he accepted the Armenian genocide as a fact.[14]
Writings
He has written ten books in English and eighteen in Greek, including:[15]
The Self-Determination of Minorities in International Politics (London: Frank Cass, 1991).
The Arab-Israeli Conflict: The Problèmatique of Peaceful Resolution (Athens: Papazissis, 1991) [in Greek].
Security and Co-operation in Europe: The Human Dimension, 1972-1992 (London: Frank Cass, 1993).
Helsinki-II and its Aftermath: The Making of the CSCE into an International Organization (London: Pinter, 1993).
Greece and the “Threat from the East” (Athens: Polis, 2001) [in Greek], also published in Turkey as Yunanistan ve “Dogu’dan Gelen Tehlike” Turkiye: *Turk-Yunan Iliskilerinde Cikmazlar ve Cozum Yollari (Istanbul: Iletişim, 2002).
International Society and the Theories of International Relations: A Critical Survey (Athens: I.Sideris, 2000) [in Greek].
The Cyprus Question: Conflict and Resolution (Athens: I. Sideris, 2002) [in Greek].
The Cyprus Problem, 1947-2004: From Union to Partition? (Athens: I.Sideris, 2006) [in Greek].
The Greek-Turkish Conflict in the Aegean: Imagined Enemies (Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2010).For favorable reviews of this book see Tozun Bahcheli, in South-East European and Black Sea Studies, 11:2 (2011), pp. 211–13; and Tozun Bahcheli, in Turkish Studies, 13:2 (2012), pp. 269–71.
The Evolution of International Society (Athens: I.Sideris, 2012) [in Greek].
with Ada Dialla, Humanitarian Intervention in the Long Nineteenth Century: Setting the Precedent (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2015).
National Issues and Ethnocentrism: A Critique of Greek Foreign Policy (Athens: I. Sideris, 2018) [in Greek].
The Macedonian Question 1878-1918: From National Claims to Conflicting National Identities (Athens: Themelio, 2018) [in Greek].
editor with Gizem Alioğlu Çakmak, Greece and Turkey in Conflict and Cooperation: From Europeanization to De-Europenalization (Abingdon: Routledge, 2019).
Just War and Humanitarian Intervention: A History in the International Ethics of War (Athens: I.Sideris, 2020).
The Macedonian Question and the Macedonians: A History (Abingdon: Routledge, 2021). For a favorable review of this book see Athina Skoulariki, in Historein, 21:1 (2023).
with Ylli Kromidha, Greek-Albanian Entanglements since the Nineteenth Century: A History (Abingdon: Routledge, 2023).
Conflict Resolution: Self-Determination, Secession, Intervention, Ethnonational and International Conflict (with a Preface by James Mayall) (Thessaloniki: Epikentro, 2024).
Greece and its Neighbours: National identity and Otherness (Athens: I. Sideris, 2024) [in Greek].
Islam and Islamic Thought: Philosophy, Modernism, Liberalism and their Enemies. In Quest of Averroes (Athens: Themelio, 2024)[in Greek].
Contributions
His main political contributions to date are with regard to intervention in secessionist conflicts,[16] the reasons for separatism,[17] secession and self-determination,[18] human rights norm-setting in the CSCE process,[19] the Cyprus problem,[20] the Greek-Turkish conflict in the Aegean [21] and the history of humanitarian intervention.
References
^G. Bertrand, Le conflit helléno-turc: la confrontation des deux nationalismes à l’aube du XXIe siècle (2003), p.286. L. Karakatsanis, Turkish-Greek Relations: Rapprochement, Civil Society and the Politics of Friendship (2014), 101, 239, 242.
^T. Kostopoulos, The Forbidden Language: State Repression of the Slavic Dialects in Greek Macedonia (2000) [in Greek], pp.334-6.T. Michas, Unholy Alliance: Greece and Milosevic's Serbia (2002), pp.36, 127, 146, 156. D. Anagnostou, “Deepening Democracy or Defending the Nation? The Europeanization of Minority Rights and Greek Citizenship”, in K. Featherstone (ed.), Politics and Policy in Greece: The Challenge of Modernization (2005), p.134.
^ ab"ΤΡΙΤΗ ΑΠΟΨΗ: Ανιστόρητη πράξη [THIRD OPINION: Ahistorical act]". ΤΑ ΝΕΑ (in Greek). 2006-11-02. Retrieved 2023-09-08. Η πρόσφατη ποινικοποίηση της μη αποδοχής της Αρμενικής Γενοκτονίας από τη Γαλλική Βουλή είναι πράξη ανιστόρητη, με προφανή ατζέντα να τεθούν εμπόδια στην τουρκική πορεία προς την Ευρωπαϊκή Ένωση. Επιπλέον αποτελεί καταπάτηση της ελευθερίας της έκφρασης και της γνώμης... [The recent criminalization of Armenian Genocide denial by The French Parliament is an ahistorical act, with an obvious agenda to put up obstacles in the Turkish path towards the European Union. Additionally it infringes upon the freedom of expression and opinion...]
^D.Carment, P.James and Z.Taydas, Who Intervenes? Ethnic Conflict and Interstate Crisis (2006), pp.2, 13-14, 110, 218; R.Taras and R.Ganguly, Understanding Ethnic Conflicts: The International Dimension (2002), pp.10, 15-16, 18-19, 22, 41, 44, 46-8, 51-4, 58, 60, 63-64, 66, 73-4, 77, 79-82; L. Belanger et al., “Foreign Interventions and Secessionist Movements: The Democratic Factor”, Canadian Journal of Political Science (2005), pp.435, p.439, 457.
^T.R. Gurr and B. Harff, Ethnic Conflict in World Politics (1994), pp.140-1, 178-80; Taras and Ganguly, op.cit.
^G. Welhengama, Minorities' Claims: Autonomy and Secession (2009), pp.237, 242-3, 245; B. Coppieters & R. Sakwa (eds), Contextualizing Secession: Normative Studies in a Comparative Perspective (2003), pp.231, 237-51; L. Bishai, Forgetting Ourselves: Secession and the (Im)possibility of Territorial Identity (2004), pp.46-7, 54.
^V-Y. Ghebali, L'OSCE dans l'Europe post-communiste, 1990-1996 (1996), pp. 37, 40, 49, 72, 100, 133, 145, 449, 451-2, 454, 457-8, 464. E. Adler, Communitarian International Relations (2005), pp.204, 311-12, 315. A. Wenger and V. Mastny, Origins of the European Security System: The Helsinki Process Revisited, 1965-1975 (2008), 195.
^N.Loizides, “Ethnic Nationalism and Adaptation in Cyprus”, International Studies Perspectives, 8, 2 (2007), p.187. P. Polyviou, The Diplomacy of the Invasion (2010) [in Greek], p.218; Y. Papadakis, Echoes from the Dead Zone: Across the Cyprus Divide (2005), p.256.
^T. Bahcheli, in South-East European and Black Sea Studies, 11,2 (2011), pp.211-13 and in Turkish Studies, 13, 2 (2012), pp.269-71; E. Athanassopoulou, in Nations and Nationalism, 17, 4 (2011), pp.872-3; I.D. Stefanidis, in Diplomacy & Statecraft, 22,4 (2011), pp.768-70.