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Taking into consideration that emergency state was lifted in southeast of Turkey in
2002, but migration continued and negative net migration from Kurdish inhabited regions still have grown. It can be argued that between 2002 and 2015 there was a more voluntary flow of internal migration. It was based more on economic and educational needs and pull factors than push factors connected with physical conflict, which was the case during the 1980s and especially the 1990s in Turkey.
With the failure of the peace process and drastic aftermath of coup attempt it can be
argued that these changes will result in the wave of forced migration in the country.
These processes can strengthen the atmosphere of insecurity in Turkey which will
stimulate a wave of forced migration both in its internal and external aspects. The
article aims at analyzing the events and their results which are connected with deterioration of security in Turkey, and that can lead to the rise in forced migration. It starts with a general overview of circumstances leading to resolution of armed conflict. The second part of the article points to some estimations of deadly consequences of it and closes with an attempt to search for some indicators of the beginning of a new wave of forced migration in Turkey.