This article studies the application of laws regulating the settlement and compensation of
migrants who came to Turkey from Greece in the course of the population exchange. By
using petitions and administrative documents, it discusses the questions of legality and
legitimacy with regard to two problems: First, the status of exchangees as a group privileged
by law, and second, the bureaucratic procedure through which they were given temporary
property rights (tefvīż ). The article shows that laws can by no means be taken to be identical
with their application, and that various notions of legality and legitimacy were at play, both in
different state administrations and among those affected by their policies. It thus makes an
important contribution to a better understanding of the relationship between law, state and
society in early Republican Turkey
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