Ulug-Eryilmaz, B.2016-02-082016-02-08201414683857http://hdl.handle.net/11693/26454This article examines Turkish–EU relations and the Cyprus issue within the Europeanization framework. It seeks to underline how and to what extent EU conditionality was performed in Turkey’s Cyprus policy in the post-Helsinki period. The exploration of the relationship between domestic political pressures and the foreign policy choices of the AKP government on the Cyprus issue suggests that EU’s potential in transforming the foreign policy of candidates is both context dependent and questionable. Alongside EU-related factors such as the credible membership perspective, what accounts for change is predominantly determined by how domestic actors perceive it, and how much domestic power struggles are affected by it. © 2014 Taylor & Francis.EnglishAKPCyprusEuropeanizationforeign policyTurkeyThe myth of ‘Europeanization’ of Turkish foreign policy: the Cyprus debacle as a litmus testArticle10.1080/14683857.2014.924676