Kula, Erhun İbrahim

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Organizasyon Birimleri

Organizasyon Birimi
Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, İktisat Bölümü
İktisat Bölümü, başta Türkiye ve çevre ülkeler olmak üzere küresel ekonomileri anlayan, var olan sorunları analiz ederken, iktisadi kuramları ve kavramları yetkin ve özgün bir şekilde kullanma becerisine sahip bireyler yetiştirmeyi amaçlamaktadır.

Adı Soyadı

Erhun İbrahim Kula

İlgi Alanları

Ormancılık politikası ve yönetimi, Ormancılık Ekonomisi Koşullu değerleme, REDD+ veya Ormansızlaşma ve (Orman) Bozulmasından Kaynaklanan Emisyonların Azaltılması

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Pasif Personel

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Listeleniyor 1 - 2 / 2
  • Yayın
    Pitfalls in the Turkish nuclear programme
    (The British Association for Turkish Area Studies, 2019) Kula, Erhun İbrahim; Kula, Erhun İbrahim; Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, İktisat Bölümü
    The origins of nuclear power go back to 1885 when Rontgen discovered the X-ray and one year later Becquerel identified natural radiation. In 1939 Hahn and Strassman achieved the splitting of the uranium atom in Berlin which initiated fission technology. Three years later in the USA Fermi proved that the fission chain reaction in uranium nuclei could be sustained and controlled, making it feasible to harness this energy. Then nuclear technology developed in two different ways; the creation of a nuclear bomb and the development of a nuclear reactor for power generation. On 6 August 1945 a successfully assembled uranium-235 bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and on 12 August a plutonium bomb was dropped on Nagasaki which ended the war in the Pacific.
  • Yayın
    Churchill-a good friend of Turkey
    (The British Association for Turkish Area Studies, 2020) Kula, Erhun İbrahim; Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, İktisat Bölümü; Yönetim Bilimleri Fakültesi, İktisat Bölümü
    In Turkey Winston Churchill is known as an important historic figure of the twentieth century but also as an adversary of the Turks, largely due to the Gallipoli Campaign in which he was the major architect. The Campaign was a disaster for the Allied Forces and a great humiliation for Churchill which cost him his job as First Lord of the Admiralty. For the Turks, however, Gallipoli was a great victory which erased the bad image created by the First Balkan War of 1912 which portrayed the Turks as easy meat. Gallipoli reversed that. The victory at Gallipoli has largely been attributed to the military genius of the field commander Mustafa Kemal, who in later years became the top figure in Turkish politics and the founder of the Turkish Republic. A British staff officer writing about the official history of the event argued that ‘seldom in history can the exertion of a single commander have exercised so profound an influence, not only in the course of a battle, but on the destiny of the entire nation