Title of article :
Turkish Political Culture and Civil Society: An Unsettling Coupling?
Author/Authors :
Burak, Begüm Department of Political Science and Public Administration - Fatih University,
Abstract :
This paper attempts to analyze Turkish politics in the post-1980 period
with a special reference to the relationship among the state elites,
political elites and societal actors, and its impact on the constitution
of civil society in Turkey. After the 1980 military intervention, the political
and economic realms of Turkey witnessed a relative degree of
liberalization through Özal’s neo-liberal policies. The January 24 economic
decisions paved the way for economic liberalization as well as
letting new economic and societal actors emerge. These new economic
actors were different from the prevailing economic actors which used
to enjoy a considerable amount of opportunity spaces in the economic
sphere. Together with the Özal governments, Islamic segments started
to become powerful in both political and economic realms. This paper
analyses the chief traits of Turkish politics and economics and their
impact upon civil society aftermath the 1980 coup in general, and the
relationship and/or interaction among the state elites, political elites
and societal actors in particular. The engagements of newly-emerging
societal and economic actors into Turkish political scene and the challenge
of these actors against the so-called “Kemalist-Republican”
elites are also illustrated in the paper. Moreover, state-Islam interaction,
politics-Islam interaction as well as Kemalism-newly-emerging
societal and economic actors interaction will be studied with a special
emphasis to the post-1980 period. The major argument of the paper
is that, in Turkey, both civil society issues and political issues reveal
outcomes which are primarily shaped by the nature of the relationship
between state elites and political elites in general and by Turkish political
culture in particular.
Keywords :
Turkey , Political Islam , Civil Society , Kemalism , State Elite , Political Elite , Political Culture
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics