Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Reconstructing Democracy and Political Parties [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 376 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x21 mm, kaal: 552 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Mar-2009
  • Kirjastus: VDM Verlag
  • ISBN-10: 3639087208
  • ISBN-13: 9783639087208
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 376 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x21 mm, kaal: 552 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Mar-2009
  • Kirjastus: VDM Verlag
  • ISBN-10: 3639087208
  • ISBN-13: 9783639087208
Teised raamatud teemal:
Studies of democratization in the 1980s and 1990s after the second-wave of military regimes across the world investigated the process from various angles, each focusing on its specific dimensions and actors. This study analyzes the Turkish experience of re-democratization preceded by a relatively short military regime (1980-1983) from the perspective of political parties, it deals with both the trajectory of democratization and the reconstruction of political parties as institutions. Turkish democratization has turned out to be a protracted process extending into the late 1990s---and even continuing today-, and it has unfolded through a series of political reforms. While the Turkish military has retained its tutelary and supervisory role, political parties emerged as the critical actors in the reform process. This study looks closely into the identities and strategies of Turkey's major political parties and party elites who held power in the first decade after the transition from military rule. It analyzes how parties have met the double challenge of institutionalizing and of democratizating the political system amidst internal and external pressures.
Acknowledgements 6(2)
Abbreviations 8(1)
Introduction 9(9)
Parties, Military and Democratization: the Turkish Case
10(3)
Parties, Political Identities and Multiple Pressures
13(1)
Research Procedure
14(2)
Structure of the Study
16(2)
Chapter 1 Dilemmas of Democratization and Party Building Under Military Tutelage: A Framework for Analysis
18(47)
Introduction: Democratization From a Party Perspective
18(45)
I Conceptualizing Democratization
19(1)
1 Issues and Actors
19(4)
2 "Democracy": The Appeal of the Procedural Approach
23(2)
II Challenges to Consolidation
25(1)
1 The Military Factor
25(4)
2 "Anti-System" Challenges
29(2)
a The Importance of "Inclusion"
31(5)
b The Problem of Civilian Consensus on the `Anti-System' Threats and the Weakening of Democratic Institutions
36(2)
III Civilian Actors in Democratization
38(1)
1 Overemphasis on Elite Interactions and Inter- Elite Consensus
38(3)
2 Party Actors
41(2)
IV Approaches to Political Parties and Political Reformism
43(1)
1 The Institutionalist Perspective
44(3)
2 Rational Choice Perspective
47(3)
3 Understanding the Interaction Between Institutions and Incentives
50(2)
V Dual Party Framework
52(1)
1 Parties Under Internal and External Pressures (The "Duality" of Parties)
53(2)
2 Challenges for Party Leaders
55(4)
3 Party Identity Concerns at the Crossroads of Internal and External Challenges
59(3)
4 Questions Arising From the Pressures of the Reconciliation of Internal and External Policies In Democratizing Policies
62(1)
Conclusions
63(2)
Chapter 2 Democratization from above and the Kemalist Legacy
65(27)
Introduction
65(26)
I The Kemalist Transformation and the Single Party Regime
65(4)
1 Kemalism: A Blueprint for the New State
69(1)
2 The Six Arrows
70(5)
II Transition to the Multi-Party Competition
75(3)
III The Coup of 1960 and the "Guardian Military" Until 1980
78(1)
1 The "Veto Coup"
78(4)
2 The Post-1960 Military-Civilian Relations
82(1)
a Reconstruction by the Military
82(2)
b Radicalization of Turkish Politics and the Intervention of 1971
84(3)
IV The Military Intervention of 12 September 1980
87(4)
Conclusions
91(1)
Chapter 3 Re-Designing the New Rules of the Game: Political System After 1980
92(36)
Introduction
92(34)
I The National Security Regime
92(3)
II The New Constitution and the Legal System
95(1)
1 The Rationale of the New Constitution and the Legislation on the Political Society
96(4)
2 The Presidency
100(2)
3 Provisional (Transitional) Articles and Political Bans
102(1)
III The 1983 Elections and the Transfer of Power to Civilians
103(3)
IV The Entrenchment of The Military's Tutelary Role After 1980
106(1)
1 Ideological Sources of Autonomy
106(2)
2 The Institutional Sources
108(1)
a The NSC Tutelage
108(3)
b Reserved Domains
111(1)
c Irreversibility of the Actions of the Military Regime
112(1)
V The Rise of Anti-System Threats
113(1)
1 The Kurdish Question
113(1)
a Origins of the Problem
113(4)
b Politicization and Polarization
117(3)
2 The Rise of Political Islam
120(1)
a Jacoben Secularization and Its Aftermath
120(2)
b The `Islamist Threat'
122(4)
Conclusions
126(2)
Chapter 4 The Motherland Party (1983-1987): The Rise of a "Non-Ideological" Party
128(33)
Introduction
128(31)
I The Birth of the Party: Facing a Double Challenge
128(3)
II Relations with President Evren: In Defense of the Constitution
131(4)
III The Identity Challenge: Components of the MP's Reformist Image
135(1)
1 The Neo-Liberal Construction of the Relationship Between Stability and Democracy
136(1)
a Proceeding with the Economic Reconstruction Program
136(2)
b The Individual In the Context of Issue-Based Politics
138(1)
c Stability and Freedoms
139(2)
2 The Quest for Consensual Politics and the Rejection of the Old Politics
141(3)
3 The Volatile Center: Unifying "The Four Tendencies"
144(3)
IV External Challenge: Accelerating Competition
147(2)
V Internal Determinants of the Party Identity
149(1)
a The Introverts Versus The Extroverts
150(2)
b Ozal and the Domination of Extroverted Centrism
152(2)
VI Image Building and Unity Under Turgut Ozal's Leadership
154(4)
VII The Meaning and the Place of Democratization In the MP Agenda By 1987
158(1)
Conclusions
159(2)
Chapter 5 The Motherland Party Before and After Elections 1987
161(52)
Introduction
161(50)
I At the Ballot Box: Maintaining Power and Consolidating Identity
161(2)
II The 1987 Referendum on Political Bans
163(1)
1 Mounting Pressure on the Government For Constitutional Changes
164(3)
2 The Bargaining
167(4)
3 A Reluctant No Campaign
171(3)
III The Repercussions of Intensifying Competition on Intra-Party Dynamics
174(5)
IV The 1987 Elections
179(3)
V Another Referendum Initiative
182(4)
VI The Double-Track Approach Toward the Anti-System Threats
186(1)
1 Relations With the Military on Challenges to State Secularism
186(1)
a Ozal, Secularism and the Question of Islamic Fundamentalism
186(3)
b The Crisis of January 1987: To Defend the Party or the State?
189(5)
2 The Southeastern Problem
194(4)
VII Reconciling Democratization With the State's Integrity: The Case of The Criminal Law Reform
198(1)
1 Towards The Liberalization of the Legal Framework
199(3)
2 Ozal Becomes the President
202(1)
3 Struggle Against Separatist Violence and Repercussions in the Party
203(5)
4 The Anti-Terror Law
208(2)
III Leadership Change in the MP Towards Early Elections of 1991
210(1)
Conclusions
211(2)
Chapter 6 Partners of the Grand Coalition: The True Path Party Under Demirel and the Social Democratic Populist Party Under Inonu (November 1991- June 1993)
213(60)
Introduction
213(22)
I The 1991 Elections and Rising Expectations
214(2)
II Reconstruction of the Political Identity and Democratization Platform of the TPP (1983-1991)
216(1)
1 The TPP During the Opposition Years: The Revival of the JP Tradition Under Demirel
217(3)
2 The Legacy of the Justice Party in the Political Identity of the True Path Party
220(1)
a Electoral Democracy, National will and the State
220(2)
b Pragmatic and Reformist Conservatism
222(3)
3 "Has Demirel Changed?": Democratization Platform Prior to the 1991 Elections
225(1)
a Human Rights and the Paris Charter
225(3)
b The Assault on the Motherland Party and Ozal
228(3)
c Demirel and Anti-militarism
231(4)
4 Demirel and the Question of the Kurdish Separatist Threat
235(1)
De-Politicization and the Emphasis of the State
235(34)
III Democratization for the SDPP In the Social Democratic Identity Building
238(1)
1 A New Party With Roots in the Past
238(4)
2 Democracy Platform
242(2)
3 The Southeast Question and Democratization: Internal and External Challenges of the SDPP
244(1)
a The Dilemma
244(2)
b The Southeast Report and Its Aftermath
246(4)
4 "To Be or Not to Be in the Government"
250(2)
5 The Inonu Leadership and Increasing Intra-Party Tensions
252(3)
IV The Early Years of the Coalition, 1991-1993
255(1)
1 The Reform Agenda of the Government
256(2)
2 Demirel Re-Asserts Pragmatism Toward the Military
258(2)
3 Junior Coalition Partner SDPP Engulfed in Identity Problems
260(2)
V The Judicial Reform: Trade-Off Between Democratization and the Protection of the State's Indivisibility Highlighted
262(5)
VI Reform Rhetoric Amidst Concerns Over Stability Towards the End of the Demirel Era
267(2)
Conclusions
269(4)
Chapter 7 Democratization Process During the Grand Coalition After Leadership Changes (1993-1995)
273(53)
Introduction
273(51)
I Tansu Ciller's Selection for the Leadership of the TPP and Early Challenges
274(3)
1 Ciller's Reform Agenda: "Opening a White Page"
277(2)
2 Ciller's Initial Strategy Towards a Familiar Dilemma: Reconciling Democratization with the Protection of the State's Indivisibility
279(1)
a Search for a Civilian Consensus
279(4)
b Internal Pressures on Ciller
283(4)
3 "Technical Prime Minister"
287(3)
II The Deepening of Internal Problems in the Junior Partner SDPP
290(1)
1 Inonu's Conciliatory Approach to the Southeast Question
290(1)
2 Internal and External Challenges To the New Leadership
291(4)
III Increasing External Pressures on the Coalition Partners
295(1)
1 The Hardliner Current in the Parliament
295(1)
2 On the Verge of a Political Crisis and Deadlock in the Parliament
296(5)
IV Intra-Party Problems of the Coalition Partners
301(1)
1 The TPP Concern over Electoral Decline: "Did Ciller Ignore the Party's Mission?"
301(4)
2 The Trade-Off Accentuates: "Should the SDPP Leave the Government?"
305(1)
V The Democratization Package of May 1994
306(2)
VI The Extension of the Tenure of The Commanders
308(1)
VII The SDPP Ambivalence Over the Democratization Package
309(1)
VIII Intra-Party Tensions in the SDPP, Conflict with the TPP and the Separatist Threat
310(5)
IX Cross-Pressures Highlighted: The SDPP's Withdrawal from the Vote on the Removal of the Immunities In the Parliament
315(2)
X The Hard-liner Current Across the Introvert and Extrovert Groups In the SDPP
317(2)
XI Restricted Reform: The July 1995 Constitutional Amendments
319(5)
Conclusions
324(2)
Conclusions
326(9)
Reform and the End of an Era
326(1)
Constraints on the Parties
327(3)
Anti-System Threats and Democratization
330(2)
Contributions and Avenues for Further Research
332(3)
Bibliography
335(25)
General Sources on Political Parties and Democratization
335(8)
Sources on Turkish Politics
343(9)
Memoirs
352(1)
Newspapers and Weekly Journals
352(1)
Proceedings (`Verbatim Reports')of the TGNA (Turkish Grand National Assembly)
352(1)
Party Documents
353(7)
The Motherland Party
353(2)
The True Path Party
355(2)
The Social Democratic Populist Party
357(1)
Miscellaneous
358(2)
Appendix
360
I Elections Results (1983-1995)
360(2)
II Splits and Mergers in the Center-Left Since 1983
362(1)
III Amendments to the Constitution in 1995: Amendment Proposals Approved and Rejected by the TGNA in 23 July 1995
363(4)
IV Interviewees and Interview Details
367