Presidential Politics of Turkey: The View from Rural Communities

Author (Person)
Series Title
Series Details Vol.9, No.3, July-September 2007, p18-25
Publication Date March 2007
ISSN 1302-177X
Content Type

Abstract: Dramatic, controversial, and fiercely fought, the Turkish elections of 2007 marked a pivotal point in the administration of the ruling AK Party, and, it has been suggested, for Turkey as a whole. The presidential race in particular triggered a storm of academic and media discussion, and stimulated large-scale popular responses such as mass demonstrations in several urban centres. Amid such high-level interest, relatively little attention has been paid to the perspectives of small, rural communities on the issue. Although they represent an important section of the electorate, the views of such communities are rarely researched in detail, and are not always shaped by religious and cultural issues as is often assumed. Interviews carried out over the election period suggest that the rural electorate hold much more complex views concerning presidential politics than has been widely supposed, and point to a more nuanced interpretation of ‘political Islam' than is usually implied by the term.

Source Link http://www.insightturkey.com/
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