Proliferation of neopatrimonial domination in Turkey


Cengiz F. Ç.

BRITISH JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, cilt.47, sa.4, ss.507-525, 2020 (AHCI) identifier identifier

  • Yayın Türü: Makale / Tam Makale
  • Cilt numarası: 47 Sayı: 4
  • Basım Tarihi: 2020
  • Doi Numarası: 10.1080/13530194.2018.1509693
  • Dergi Adı: BRITISH JOURNAL OF MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
  • Derginin Tarandığı İndeksler: Arts and Humanities Citation Index (AHCI), Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), Scopus, Academic Search Premier, IBZ Online, International Bibliography of Social Sciences, Geobase, Historical Abstracts, Index Islamicus, Linguistic Bibliography, Linguistics & Language Behavior Abstracts, MLA - Modern Language Association Database, Political Science Complete, Sociological abstracts, Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
  • Sayfa Sayıları: ss.507-525
  • Ondokuz Mayıs Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

Literature on Turkey's post-2011 authoritarian turn - especially after the eruption of the 2013 nationwide Gezi Protests - adopts modern concepts such as 'dictatorship', 'authoritarianism', 'totalitarianism', 'one-party government', 'party-state fusion', and even 'fascism' mainly in order to pin down the nature of the Justice and Development Party (AKP, Turkish acronym) or depict the current character of Turkey's regime. Through engaging the pre-modern concept of neopatrimonialism, which is derived from Max Weber's concept of patrimonialism, this paper argues that Turkey's encounter with authoritarianism is deeply associated with the proliferation of neopatrimonial domination, into which the legacy of patronage politics, fracture of security power, and the metastasis of crony capitalism have been conflated. This article argues that neopatrimonial features have always, to a degree, marked state-society relations in Turkey. Furthermore, this article suggests neopatrimonial characteristics started to dominate Turkey's modern legal structure under the AKP, which led to a state crisis culminating in the 2016 attempted coup. However, despite the fact that neopatrimonialism cannot be argued as a pathological deviation from modern-legal domination, this paper concludes that tension exists between the crony capitalism-based economic model of neopatrimonalism and Turkey's decades-long market-based capitalism.