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AKP RULE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   137427


Alevi openings and politicization of the Alevi issue during the AKP rule / Ozkul, Derya   Article
Ozkul, Derya Article
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Summary/Abstract This article reviews recent government efforts to address the “Alevi issue” and identify their successes and failures. It demonstrates that the “Alevi openings” constituted paradoxical processes: tracing various components of the “openings” through news media, it shows that, on one hand, they enabled the “Alevi issue” to be brought to public attention. On the other hand, once Alevis were made more visible in public, non-sympathizers could mobilize their representation for their own ends. These empirical findings have profound theoretical implications. They show that “discursive claims of democratization” at the state level do not necessarily result in democratic mechanisms, which can resolve the demands of a pluralistic civil society. The author argues that what she calls the “tutelary secularism” in Turkey, in other words, the management and disciplining of religious groups, continues under the Justice and Development Party (AKP) rule. This model not only fails, but also produces new sources of conflict in Turkey.
Key Words Turkey  Democratization  Politicization  Alevi Issue  AKP Rule 
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2
ID:   140698


Shift-of-axis in Turkish foreign policy: Turkish national role conceptions before and during AKP rule / Baser, Ekrem T   Article
Baser, Ekrem T Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines Turkish national role conceptions in 1992–2012, identified based on leading Turkish foreign policy-makers’ statements. It contends that the notion that “shift of axis” arguments proliferated in the AKP (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi) era is misleading. The pattern of Turkish foreign policy roles expressed by the political elite in the period under examination suggests a gradual change toward an ambitious attitude rather than a shift of axis. A plausible explanation would be that the foreign policy roles under any government heavily reflect objective national interests and capabilities, thus a shifting of axis is unlikely to occur without a significant change in these variables.
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