Nationalism and Foreign Policy Discourse in Turkey Under the AKP Rule: Geography, History and National Identity

Date

2015

Authors

Saraçoğlu, C.
Demirkol Ö.

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Source Title

British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies

Print ISSN

13530194

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Routledge

Volume

42

Issue

3

Pages

301 - 319

Language

English

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Abstract

The argument of this paper is that the new foreign policy orientation of Turkey under the AKP (Justice and Development Party) government is a constitutive component of a new nationalist project, constructed and carried out by the AKP over the last decade. The article expounds the ways in which the AKP has reformulated the notions of nation, national history, homeland and national interest and demonstrates the role foreign policy has played in this reformulation. Our point of departure will be the patterns we have observed in the statements and political practices of the AKP government and its officials, particularly the incumbent minister of foreign affairs Ahmet Davutoğlu, whose book, Strategic Depth, presents a more systematic explanation of the major principles and assertions of AKP nationalism and foreign policy. We will also argue that after the Gezi protests in June 2013 this new conception of nation and nationalism has faced with a deep crisis, which has also exacerbated the problem of pursuing an ambitious foreign policy strategy in international arena. © 2014, British Society for Middle Eastern Studies.

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