Critical Readings of Turkey's Foreign Policy, edited by Birsen Erdoğan and Fulya Hisarlıoğlu
In: European review of international studies: eris, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 229-232
ISSN: 2196-7415
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In: European review of international studies: eris, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 229-232
ISSN: 2196-7415
In: Kadın/Woman 2000, Journal for Women's Studies, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 147-150
Toplantılar için bakınız: http://wfp14.org/en/our-events/speaker-series/.
Eğitimler için bakınız: http://bm1325eylemplani.org/.
Sohbetler için bakınız: http://wfp14. org/en/our-events/roundtables/cooperation-withdiplomatic-corps.
Alemdar Z. (2018). Women Count Turkey 2018: Turkey's Implementation of Unscr 1325. Stockholm: Operation 1325. URL: https://www.operation1325. se/sites/default/files/women_count_turkey.pdf.
In: Middle Eastern studies, Band 50, Heft 4, S. 568-588
ISSN: 1743-7881
In: UluslararasI Iliskiler, Band 7, Heft 28, S. 111-128
In: Reform and Transition in the Mediterranean
Introduction -- Transformation of Party and Election System in Turkey -- Transformation and challenges in Government System in Turkey: 'The Turkish Type of Presidentializm" -- Transformation of Judiciary for a Turkey in Transition: Dynamics and Consequences -- Turkey's Political Economy in International Context -- Transformation of Secularism in Turkey -- Gender Equality in Turkey -- The Changing Dynamics of Protests under Turkey's Authoritarian Transformation: Actors, Repertoires and Strategies of Repression -- (De)Securitization of the Kurdish Issue in Turkey: The Nexus between Foreign Policy and Domestic Politics in the Twenty-First Century -- The Transformation of Migration Governance in Turkey -- Transformation of Turkey's Environmental Policy: A Case of Selective Europeanization? -- Transformation and Challenges in Turkey-EU Relations: A Case of Foreign Policy with Domestic Political Implications -- An Agent-Based Bounded Rationality Analysis Turkey's Relations with Greece -- Turkey-US Relations: From the Catalyst of the Model Country Image to the Reference Point of Defensive Discourses -- Transformation and Challenges in Turkish Foreign Policy: Turkey Russia Relations -- Turkey and the Middle East: The Rise and Fall of Turkey's Power -- Cooperation Amid Transformation: Turkey and International Organizations.
In: Reform and transition in the Mediterranean
This book analyzes the transformation of Turkeys international and domestic politics in the past two decades through a comprehensive domestic- international nexus. It examines the domestic system and the main historical challenges without neglecting their international drivers and looks into main foreign policy areas and issues by accounting for the domestic developments that affected them. Looking inside Turkeys transformation on the basis of an interplay of external and internal factors, through the prism of critical scholars who all agree on the interdependency of national and international politics, it is designed to provide a thoughtful look into the future of Turkey through themes and regions. Harun Arikan is Professor of International Relations at ukurova University, Turkey. He was a research fellow at Oxford University in the UK, and a visiting scholar at the University of Southern Maine in the USA. Zeynep Alemdar is Professor of Political Science at Istanbul Okan University, Turkey, where she currently acts as Dean of the Business and Administration Faculty and directs the Gender Studies Research Center.
In: New Perspectives on Turkey, Heft 43, S. 33-61
In: New perspectives on Turkey: NPT, Band 43, S. 33-61
ISSN: 1305-3299
AbstractThe privatization of security services, which implies the dispersal of the legitimate right to use force, has been traditionally understood as operating at the expense of state sovereignty. The increasing privatization of security services around the world and the substantial growth of the private security sector in Turkey create the need to reassess the nature of this privatization. Drawing upon the work of Michel Foucault and other scholars of governmentality, as well as our own field research, we try to make such an assessment, without falling back on the traditional state-market (state-society) duality. Research shows that the Turkish private security sector, reported as being tied to both the exigencies of the state and the rules of the market, has an amorphic nature marked by intricate relationships, formal and informal, with public law enforcement agencies. We argue that the sector's privatization, although defended by some as a way to grant accountability and transparency to security services, is neither a remedy for those gaps, nor does it imply a straightforward decline of the state; rather, it is proof that the idea of an autonomous, unitary "state" should be revised and a sign that a different and intricate network of state apparatus and private experts continue to govern our lives in ways unique to neoliberalism.
This book focuses on regulatory challenges of creating and sustaining freedom of speech and freedom of information two decades after the fall of the Berlin wall, in global, comparative context. Some chapters overview, others address specific issues, or describe country case studies. Instead of trying to provide an exhaustive assessment which in one volume might not reach deeper analyzes of contextual details, this book will shed light on and help better understanding of general challenges for freedom of speech and information through varying comparative examples and highlighting important regulatory questions