Publication:
Turkey: the slippery slope from reformist to revolutionary polarization and democratic breakdown

dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of International Relations
dc.contributor.kuauthorSomer, Murat
dc.contributor.schoolcollegeinstituteCollege of Administrative Sciences and Economics
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-09T06:07:19Z
dc.date.available2026-01-09
dc.date.issued2019
dc.description.abstractUnder the Justice and Development Party AKP and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey has become one of the most polarized countries in the world, and has undergone a significant democratic breakdown. This article explains how polarization and democratic breakdown happened, arguing that it was based on the built-in, perverse dynamics of an authoritarian spiral of polarizing-cum-transformative politics. Furthermore, I identify ten causal mechanisms that have produced pernicious polarization and democratic erosion. Turkey's transformation since 2002 is an example of the broader phenomenon of democratic erosion under new elites and dominant groups. The causes and consequences of pernicious polarization are analyzed in terms of four subperiods: 2002-2006, 2007, 2008-2013, and 2014-present. In the end, what began as a potentially reformist politics of polarization-cum-transformation morphed into an autocratic-revolutionary one. During this process, polarization and AKP policies; the politicization of formative rifts that had been a divisive undercurrent since nation-state formation; structural transformations; and the opposition's organizational, programmatic, and personal shortcomings fed and reinforced each other.
dc.description.fulltextNo
dc.description.harvestedfromManual
dc.description.indexedbyWOS
dc.description.indexedbyScopus
dc.description.publisherscopeInternational
dc.description.readpublishN/A
dc.description.sponsoredbyTubitakEuN/A
dc.identifier.doi10.1177/0002716218818056
dc.identifier.eissn1552-3349
dc.identifier.embargoNo
dc.identifier.endpage61
dc.identifier.issn0002-7162
dc.identifier.issue1
dc.identifier.quartileQ1
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-85059046582
dc.identifier.startpage42
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1177/0002716218818056
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14288/31932
dc.identifier.volume681
dc.identifier.wos000454143400003
dc.keywordsPolarization
dc.keywordsTurkey
dc.keywordsDemocratic backsliding
dc.keywordsJustice and development party AKP
dc.keywordsPresidentialism
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherSage Publications Inc
dc.relation.affiliationKoç University
dc.relation.collectionKoç University Institutional Repository
dc.relation.ispartofAnnals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science
dc.relation.openaccessNo
dc.rightsCopyrighted
dc.subjectPolitical science
dc.subjectSocial sciences, Interdisciplinary
dc.titleTurkey: the slippery slope from reformist to revolutionary polarization and democratic breakdown
dc.typeJournal Article
dspace.entity.typePublication
person.familyNameSomer
person.givenNameMurat
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