The (un)making of the Pax Turca in the Middle East: understanding the social-historical roots of foreign policy

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Tarih

2016

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Routledge Journals

Erişim Hakkı

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Özet

Turkey's foreign policy activism has received mixed reviews. Some feel threatened by the alleged increasing Islamization of the country's foreign policy, sometimes called neo-Ottomanism', which is seen as a significant revision of Turkey's traditional transatlanticism. Others see Turkey as a stable democratic role model in a troubled region. This debate on Turkish foreign policy (TFP) remains dominated by a sense of confusion about what appear to be stark contradictions that are difficult to make sense of. Intervening in this debate, this article will develop an alternative perspective to existing accounts of Turkey's new foreign policy. Offering a historical sociological approach to foreign policy analysis, it locates recent transformations in Turkey's broader strategies of social reproduction. It subsequently argues that, contrary to claims about Turkey's axis shift, its changing foreign policies have in fact never been pro-Western or pro-American. All foreign policy shifts' and inconsistencies', we argue, are explicable in terms of historically changing strategies of social reproduction of the Ottoman and Turkish states responding to changing domestic and international conditions.

Açıklama

Anahtar Kelimeler

TURKEY, STATES, POWER, IR

Kaynak

Cambridge Review Of International Affairs

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Q2

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