Public opinion and attitude toward the military and democratic consolidation in Turkey

Date
2015
Authors
Sarigil, Z.
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Source Title
Armed Forces & Society
Print ISSN
0095-327X
Electronic ISSN
1556-0848
Publisher
Sage Publications, Inc.
Volume
41
Issue
2
Pages
282 - 306
Language
English
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Abstract

The political influence of the Turkish military has substantially declined in the last decade, triggered by the European Union’s decision during the Helsinki Summit in 1999 to grant candidacy status to Turkey. This study illuminates Turkey’s democratization process in the post-Helsinki period by empirically analyzing a relatively underinvestigated aspect of civil–military relations: public opinion and attitude toward the military and civil–military issues. Empirical analyses, based on original and comprehensive public opinion data, indicate that despite impressive reforms and improvements in the legal and institutional structures in Turkish civil–military relations in the past ten years, democratic transformation in the political culture has been lagging behind. This gap is likely to complicate democratization process in Turkey. The article also provides a discussion of broader theoretical and practical implications of empirical findings.

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