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KAYNAR, AYŞEGÜL KARS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   159338


Making of military tutelage in Turkey: the National Security Council in the 1961 and 1982 Constitutions / Kaynar, Ayşegül Kars   Journal Article
Kaynar, Ayşegül Kars Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines the Turkish National Security Council's (NSC's) constitutional status within the executive organ of the state. It surveys security councils of 31 countries to demonstrate the peculiarity of the NSC's status. It explores how the constitutional articles on the NSC were developed in the making of the 1961 and 1982 Turkish Constitutions. It examines the discussions in constituent assemblies, draft constitutions and reasoned reports of constitutional commissions in order to ascertain the motives behind the establishment of this tutelary council. The paper also offers insights into the importance and meaning of reforms that the NSC has undergone since 2001.
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2
ID:   153627


Political activism of the national security council in Turkey after the reforms / Kaynar, Ayşegül Kars   Journal Article
Kaynar, Ayşegül Kars Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Since the early 2000s, civil–military relations in Turkey have been tremendously overhauled. The National Security Council (MGK) lay at the crux of this transformation. This semi-military council was considered to be the principal formal channel that allowed the military to intervene in politics. Therefore, the reforms toward more civilian domination in the MGK were extensively hailed and reckoned as the end of the military’s protracted political role. However, subsequent developments did not verify this initial optimism about the demise of the old pattern of strong military presence in politics. This study examines the political activism of the reformed MGK. It suggests that the reforms trimmed the military’s power through subjecting its functions to civilian control. Nevertheless, this shift proved insufficient to end MGK’s political role. The MGK still actively takes part in politics and preserves its executive authority, although this authority is now performed concertedly by civilians and the soldiers.
Key Words Political Science  Arms Control  Democracy  Law  Turkey  Civil–Military Relations 
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