Reproducing 'hegemony Thereafter? the Long-Term Political Effects of the Gezi Protests in Turkey

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Date

2020

Authors

Ozen, Hayriye

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Publisher

Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

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Abstract

This study examines an understudied aspect of the Gezi protests: its long-term effects on the hegemonic politics of the Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi, AKP) government. Building on the insights of Ernesto Laclau, Chantal Mouffe, and Stuart Hall on hegemonic struggles and populism, it contends that the Gezi protests forced the AKP to reformulate its hegemonic strategies by deconstructing the relation formed contingently between the AKP and democratization, and thus, exposing both the limits of the neoliberal and Islamic/conservative hegemonic politics of the AKP, and the authoritarian tendencies of this government. The article maintains that the AKP, in response, turned to focus its efforts on becoming not hegemonic, but dominant by adopting a full-blown authoritarian populism, which, rather than entailing the closure of all democratic channels, favours retaining some for mobilizing popular support for its increasing authoritarianism. It is demonstrated that this popular support has been secured by the AKP through the articulation of a discourse that ignites fear and anxiety among the conservative religious and conservative nationalist segments, by portraying all opposition as detrimental to their interests and lifestyles. The article concludes that counter-hegemonic movements like Gezi may lead to significant political changes in the long run, even if they are repressed.

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Keywords

Turkey, Gezi, the AKP, hegemony, populism, authoritarian populism, social movement, Park Protests, Populism

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0506 political science

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OpenCitations Citation Count
13

Source

Southeast European And Black Sea Studıes

Volume

20

Issue

2

Start Page

245

End Page

264
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CrossRef : 13

Scopus : 18

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19

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19

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4

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