Since the late-1990s Turkey has emerged as a significant economic power. Never colonized and straddling the continents of Europe and Asia, it plays a strategically important role in a region of increasing instability.
Bülent Gökay examines Turkey’s remarkable domestic political and economic transformation over the past two decades within the context of broader regional and global changes. By situating the story of Turkey’s economic growth within an analysis of the structural changes and shifts in the world economy, the book provides new insights into the functioning of Turkey’s political economy and the successes and failures of its ruling party’s economic management.
Spis treści
Introduction
Part I Global shift and the world economy
1. An emerging market economy
2. The Turkish economy in the twentieth century
Part II The AKP 1: populist neoliberalism
3. Deep financial and economic crisis: Turkey prepares the ground for the AKP
4. The “golden age”: stable growth, fiscal discipline and “heaven” for foreign direct investment
5. Crisis at the global centre
Part III The AKP 2: authoritarian neoliberalism
6. The global financial crisis and Turkey’s response
7. Turkish foreign policy: the Arab Spring and the Syrian catastrophe
8. The Taksim Gezi protests and the authoritarian turn
9. The 2016 failed coup and crackdown
Part IV The crisis of global hegemony
10. The US–Turkey stand-off, trade wars and new partners
11. Turkey and uncertain predictions for the world economy
12. The Covid-19 pandemic
13. Towards a conclusion: some key trends
O autorze
Bülent Gökay is Professor of International Relations at Keele University. He is chair of the editorial committee of the Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies and Founding Editor of the Journal of Global Faultlines. His books include Eastern Europe Since 1970 (2006), Soviet Eastern Policy and Turkey, 1920–1991 (2006) and (with Ben Fowkes) Unholy Alliance: Muslims and Communists in Post-Transition States (2011).