Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:495Hits:19915744Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID193144
Title ProperUnpacking postcolonial and masculine anxieties
Other Title InformationHungary and Turkey’s responses to the EU’s handling of the 2015–2016 refugee “crisis”
LanguageENG
AuthorFutak-Campbell, Beatrix ;  Küçük, Mine Nur
Summary / Abstract (Note)In this article, we examine the Hungarian and Turkish responses to the EU’s handling of the 2015 refugee “crisis” through a postcolonial feminist IR framework. Drawing on hypermasculinity, we argue that both countries utilise migration to overcome their postcolonial and masculine anxieties by confronting their positions within the international hierarchies. Our examination of policy statements and speeches by Viktor Orbán and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan between 2015 and 2016 reveals three masculinised responses. First, both leaders portray themselves as acting out of paternal authority, while painting the EU as weak or inhumane. Second, they depict the EU as incompetent and their countries as competent providers of security. Third, they present themselves as protectors of European values, and the EU as in need of protection. These rhetorics suggest that both leaders used the “crisis” to challenge the current international hierarchy. Despite this, we argue that they are only concerned with their countries’ rankings within the hierarchy, not the system itself. Our postcolonial feminist reading of the “crisis” reveals that these masculinised framings are in fact counterproductive and only serve to confirm both Hungary and Turkey’s positions at the bottom of the international hierarchies, and their subordination to the EU as the EU’s others.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Security Vol. 32, No.3; Sep 2023: p.385-403
Journal SourceEuropean Security Vol: 32 No 3
Key WordsMigration ;  Turkey ;  Hungary ;  Hierarchies ;  Hypermasculinity ;  Postcolonial Feminist Theory


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text