IPSA: Islam and Politics in Turkey

ipsa

Update: This panel has been merged with another panel because of recent withdrawals of paper presenters. The new title of the merged panel is “Turkey: Politics, State, and Governance” and the details are available here. Aside from original panelists such as Dr. Tok and Mr. Dalay, I added Mr. Faraz Alidina paper on “Islamism, Secularism and Political Bargaining in Turkey: Revisiting Moderation Theory.” The other new presenters coming from another panel were from Dr. Oguzhan Goktolga’s “A Local Governance Experience in Turkey: From “Local Agenda 21″s to City Councils,” Ms. Nilay Baycar’s “Turkish Democracy under the Justice and Development Party (the JDP), 2002-2014,” and “Between Recognition and Autonomy: Turkey’s International Development Assistance” co-authored by Dr. Serif Onur Bahcecik and Dr. Işıl Anıl.

—–

Co-IRIS will be presenting a panel entitled “Islam and Politics in Turkey” for the 23rd World Congress of Political Science on July 19-24, 2014 in Montreal, Quebec in Canada. <Link>

[ws_table id=”7″]

This panel aims to provide a detailed analysis of the state of Islam and Politics in Turkey, discuss major figures and political elites, and focus on the post-independence era. It will include discussions and analyses of the following topics:
1. Islam and identity (formative role)
2. Islam and the forces/challenges of modernity
3. Islam and the nation-state
4. Attempts at Islamic reform or renewal
5. The interaction between the state and religion
6. The various manifestations of Islam and politics
7. The role/use of Islam in the democratization process
8. The future of Islam in Turkey

AK Party: A Conservative or In Pursuit of a New Religiosity? by Prof. Dr. Istar Gozaydin

This paper scrutinizes legal regulations in Turkey concerning any intervention on the body including euthanasia, cell research etc., but especially focusing on abortion, c- section and artificial insemination. Controversies and public debates related to these issues among different “life-styled” actors will be presented in a historical context. Thus it is targeted to map a change in role of religion in Turkey in time.

De-Securitizing the Gezi Protest: the Case of “Anti-Capitalist Muslims” by Dr. Gül Ceylan Tok

De-securitization is proposed by the Copenhagen School as the reverse process whereby an issue shifts out of the emergency mode and back into the normal bargaining processes of the political sphere (Buzan et al.1998). This paper analyzes the role of the “Anti-Capitalist Muslims”, a group of pious activists opposing the neo-liberal policies of the AK Parti government of Turkey, on the de-securitization of the Gezi Park protests. A small protest organized at the end of May 2013 against the destruction of the Gezi Park, a public park, has quickly spread all around Turkey and turned into mass demonstration against the AK Parti government. Four people died and hundreds were injured as a result of the police brutality against the protesters.

People attended the protests for different reasons. They resisted ‘the extreme urban development of the past ten years’, ‘restrictions on the freedom of speech and media’ and ‘moralizing intrusions into the citizen’s way of life’ (Gole 2013). A major reason that united such a diverse crowd was Prime Minister Erdogan’s authoritarian discourse demeaning opposing voices as marginal groups. Prime Minister tried to securitize the Gezi protests by presenting the protesters as security threat to the Muslims particularly headscarf women and framing the protests as a secularist and militarist backlash against the elected government. This paper examines how the “Anti-Capitalist Muslims” have challenged this discourse and the polarization between Islamists and secularists promoted by the Prime Minister.

Turkey’s Political Islam and the West by Mr. Galip Dalay

From the Welfare Party (WP) to the Justice and Development Party (JDP), foreign policies of Islamic parties have attracted disproportionate scrutiny. One of the focal points has been their approach to the West and Western-oriented institutions. This article, based on Jack S. Levy’s concept of learning in foreign policy, is divided into periods to better show the evolution of foreign policy perspectives: the Welfare Party period, the Virtue Party in transition, and the first (2002 – 2006), second (2006 – 2010/11), and third (2011 – ) periods of JDP rule. I argue that from WP rule until the JDP’s first period in power, these parties’ approach to the West has been largely motivated by domestic considerations for different reasons.

The WP defined the West as its Islamist identity’s “other” and sought to create an alternative framework; the JDP regarded the West as an instrument to gain legitimacy, both domestically and internationally. Yet, in its second term, the JDP attempted to balance its Western focused foreign policy with alternative complementary frameworks to achieve a more prominent international role. However, the JDP’s third term has been shaped by the Arab Spring and characterised by uncertainty about Turkey’s relations with the west. Hence, JDP rule has seen the emergence of a newly outward-facing political Islam in Turkey.

Turkishness in Between Nation and Ummah by Ms. Didem Doganyilmaz

In late 1910s, before the foundation of the Republic of Turkey, a tool should be found in order to mobilize people against the hostile forces, and it was nothing but the religion. The reason why it was religion hides behind the social conditions of the Ottoman Empire, in which the people were just the subjects of the Sultan and were not aware of any other identity, but the religious one. As a result of the Ottoman Millet System, the population were divided with respect to their religion and consequently, during the Turkish Independence War, Muslims, in other words Ummah, unified to protect both themselves and the religion against non­Muslim hostile forces.

After the victory of the war, the nation building process was started by M.K. Atatürk and his colleagues, and the newborn republic had its first constitution in 1924, in which it was written “The religion of the state is Islam…” in its second article. So, would being a “Turk” be equal to being a Muslim? What were the prerequisites of Turkishness, of being a citizen of the Republic of Turkey? Religion? With laicization and westernization process, religious references were swept away from political structure with intention to create a nation regardless of any religious components; however, within time, Islamic identity started to be pointed out with its superiority and association with real Turkishness.

What is the real Turkishness? Is it the new nation identity based on western perspective started to be built with the proclamation of the Republic; or, is it the traditional one based on Ottoman Islamic heritage? Since the establishment of the Republic of Turkey, these two identities have been in a struggle with accusing the other of undermining the real Turkishness. While, supporters of new identity have claimed that distinguishments of Islam was a threat of reactionary, supporters of traditional identity have claimed that laicism was against their cultural values and religion itself.

This paper will analyze the struggle of two different perceptions of Turkishness within a historical context of political discourses. In which period of the Republic, have Turkish politics trended to tie up to which identity? With consideration of last decade’s discourses and events, such as Gezi Park Protests, today, what does Turkishness stand for?

Key words: Turkishness, Turkish nation, ummah, Ottoman Islamic heritage, Republic of Turkey, laicism, identity struggle.

Introducing Co-IRIS (International Relations and Islamic Studies Research Cohort)

Copyright © December 29, 2012 by Co-IRIS and Nassef Manabilang Adiong

Co-IRIS (International Relations and Islamic Studies Research Cohort) is an organization interested in the advancement of comparative research between International Relations and Islamic Studies. It is created by a group of researchers interested in developing and sustaining a body of knowledge that addresses the theories and practices of the Muslim civilization and of Muslim societies with regards to international affairs and to the discipline of International Relations.
About 
The cohort for the study of International Relations (IR) and Islamic Studies (IS) is created by a group of researchers interested in developing and sustaining a body of knowledge that addresses the theories and practices of the Muslim civilization and of Muslim societies with regards to international affairs.
IR as a field is not a unilateral project rather it is an intellectual platform. The aim of Co-IRIS is to explore Islamic contributions to the field. The inclusion of Muslim contributions is not meant to create an isolationist, judicious divide between what is Islamic and what is not. The Co-IRIS is created to act on the inclusion of that knowledge as a building bloc in the IR field.
The Co-IRIS is premised on the idea that knowledge is fluid: peoples adopt and utilize thoughts and ideas regardless of faith, gender, nation, etc. The mainstream idea that all knowledge presented by the West is from an “Orientalist” perspective or that there is a “clash of civilizations” are both notions that are antithetical to our mission.

History 
The Co-IRIS was previously known as IR-IS Research Cohort. It was created by Nassef Manabilang Adiong on December 29, 2012 through various social networking sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn, and Google+. His blog/website and twitter served as temporary e-places where he formulated his thoughts and disseminated information.
It was his aspiration to introduce Islamic contributions to the field of IR because he observed a tremendous non-recognition of Islamic scholars theories and practices of international relations among IR scholars. His dream is to find shared values and mutual understanding between IR and IS. Until he found avenues and academic tools as starting point to gradually materialize his aspirations, he was able to edit a book, create a section conference, and organize meetings with people with similar passion and interests. Firstly through exchanges of correspondence with Dr. Raffaele Mauriello and Dr. Deina Abdelkader and, later, a meeting in Rapallo (Italy) from October 30 to November 02 held as part of the annual Exploratory Symposia organized by the European International Studies Association (EISA), the core Co-IRIS group was born.
Founders
Nassef Manabilang Adiong is a student of theories of International Relations and politics of Islam(icate) with research interests in the concepts of nation-state and civilization. He is the author of the following articles: “Nation-State in IR and Islam” in the Journal of Islamic State Practice in International Law, “The U.S. and Israel Securitization of Iran’s Nuclear Energy” in The Quarterly Journal of Political Studies of Islamic World, “The Palestinian Refugee Question: A Constitutive Constructivist Interpretation” in Alternatives: Turkish Journal of International Relations, “Ideology that Spawns Islamist Militancy” in Frank Shanty’s Counterterrorism: From the Cold War to the War on Terror, and encyclopaedic entries such as civilization, nation, nation-state, International Relations, nationalism, pan-Islamism, Philippines, Qatar, and Suez Canal for various publishers including ABC-CLIO, SAGE Publications, Inc., and Wiley-Blackwell. His first edited book entitled “International Relations and Islam: Diverse Perspectives” is published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing on August 2013. He can be contacted via his website at <http://www.nassef-m-adiong.com>.
Deina Abdelkader is currently an assistant professor in the department of political science at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell. Abdelkader is a Comparitivist and International Relations specialist. Her scholarly interests and research, focus on the Middle East and North Africa, Comparative Democratization in the Muslim World, Islamic Activism, and the Role of Muslim Women in Religious Interpretation. She is the author of Social Justice in Islam (2000) and Islamic Activists: The Anti-Enlightenment Democrats (Pluto Press, 2011).She has also authored a number of articles; her latest is : Coercion, Peace and the Issue of Jihad in the Digest of Middle East Studies, and a book chapter titled: “Modernity, Islam and Religious Activism”, The New Global Order and the Middle East, Ashgate Publishers, (2012)  Abdelkader is also one of two women on the Islamic Jurisprudential Council of North America (Fiqh Council of North America) and she is also part of the editorial board of the Digest of Middle East Studies, and the new President of Voile : “Voices of Islamic Law and Ethics”.  <deina_abdelkader@uml.edu>
Raffaele Mauriello is an Italian historian of the modern Middle East. He holds a PhD in Islamic Civilization: History and Philology from the Sapienza, University of Rome (Italy). He has published several peer-reviewed essays and chapters in edited volumes on Shi‘a Islam history and on Iranian and Iraqi geopolitical affairs. He is also a translator of both Arabic and Persian languages. In 2013, he was awarded the World Prize for the Book of the Year of the Islamic Republic of Iran in the field of Islamic Studies for his monograph Descendants of the Family of the Prophet in Contemporary History: A Case Study, the Šī‘ī Religious Establishment of al-Naǧaf (Iraq) published on December 2011 by Fabrizio Serra. He can be contacted through his email address, i.e. <raffaele.mauriello@me.com>.
Webmaster

Hany Bardissi is an IT Architect that specializes in enterprise integration, Web design, and IT implementation. He can be reached at <http://www.bardissi.org/>.







Networks

– Please like and click ‘get notifications’ the official Facebook page of Co-IRIS. The URL link is https://www.facebook.com/IslamicInternationalRelations
– Follow the official twitter page of Co-IRIS. The URL link is https://twitter.com/Co_IRISmate
– Please join the official LinkedIn group of Co-IRIS. The URL link  is http://www.linkedin.com/groups/IRIS-Research-Cohort-4779404 
– Please include ‘Islam and International Relations’ as one of your research interests at your academia.edu account. The URL link is http://www.academia.edu/People/Islam_and_International_Relations
– Please follow or include Co-IRIS into your Google+ circles. The URL link is http://plus.google.com/113172685707223177163

– Subscribe to the official Youtube of Co-IRIS. The URL link is http://www.youtube.com/user/1001VideosToWatch/videos

NB. You may post any relevant matters such as news, conferences, scholarships, research grants, seminars, summer schools, (non)degree programs, personalities (featured scholars, students, or practitioners), books, articles, journals, events, etc. pertaining to the advancement or progress of comparative research between IR and IS, and share it to everyone. 
The mission-vision is to achieve the goals stated below:
Short-term goals:
– Introduce Co-IRIS to institutions, think-tanks, and prominent scholars.
– Gather interested people to exchange research notes and share experiences.
– Survey review of related literature.
– Develop working concepts and frameworks of studying the subject matter.
– Present papers, panels, and sections to international conferences.
– Maintaining a dedicated website with profiles of all interested people, news, and research agenda.
Medium-term goals:
– Establishing a university or research center headquarter that will sustain Co-IRIS.
– Solicit funding via donations or volunteered contributions.
– Organize Co-IRIS annual international conference, seminars, and workshops.
– Establish an e-magazine on current affairs.
Long-term goals:
– Establish e-branches and linkages to several institutes and universities in different countries.
– Provide financial research grants and scholarships to fellow members primarily to (post/undergraduate) students and early career academicians.
– Establish an academic journal.
– Building up IR-IS as a form of research agenda through developed paradigms and methodologies.
If you have any ideas, opinions, comments, advice or suggestions, please do not hesitate to email us at info@coiris.org.
Thank you for your attention and kind consideration.

SB06-8: IR and Islam: Politics of Gender, Collective Identity, Neo-Patrimonialism, and Desecuritization

Theme: One International Relations or Many? Multiple Worlds, Multiple Crises
Wednesday 18 – Saturday 21 September 2013
Warsaw, Poland
Organised by the ECPR Standing Group on International Relations and EISA in cooperation with the Institute of International Relations, University of Warsaw and the Polish Association for International Studies.

Critical Relations between International Relations and Islam
Section Chair: Nassef Manabilang Adiong

SB06-8: IR and Islam: Politics of Gender, Collective Identity, Neo-Patrimonialism, and Desecuritization

Time:

Saturday, 21/Sep/2013:

11:15am – 1:00pm

Chair: Gorkem Altinors, University of Nottingham
Discussant: Istar Gozaydin, Dogus University, Istanbul

Location: 211 (Old Library of University of Warsaw)
Capacity of 50 people

Presentations

From Threat Perception to the Model Collaboration: Desecuritisation of the Relationship Between Turkey and Other Islamic Countries
Fikret Birdişli1, Ahmet Karadag2
1Kahramanmaraş Sütçü İmam University, Turkey; 2Inonu University, Turkey; fbirdisli@ksu.edu.tr
Gender Ideology of Turkey’s AKP: ‘the Good and Bad Daughters’ in Perspective
Gül Ceylan Tok
Kocaeli University, Turkey; gul.ceylantok@kocaeli.edu.tr
The Patriarch’s Guidance to Europe? – The ‘Post-Political’ Rise of Islamic Collective Identity in Turkey & Gradual Manifestation of Modern Neo-Patrimonialism at the Governance Level
Can Zeyrek
University of Marburg, Germany; canzeyrek@yahoo.com

SA06-7: IR and Islam: Turkey’s Political Islam and Foreign Policy

Theme: One International Relations or Many? Multiple Worlds, Multiple Crises
Wednesday 18 – Saturday 21 September 2013
Warsaw, Poland
Organised by the ECPR Standing Group on International Relations and EISA in cooperation with the Institute of International Relations, University of Warsaw and the Polish Association for International Studies.

Critical Relations between International Relations and Islam
Section Chair: Nassef Manabilang Adiong

SA06-7: IR and Islam: Turkey’s Political Islam and Foreign Policy

Time:

Saturday, 21/Sep/2013:

9:00am – 10:45am

Chair: Gül Ceylan Tok, Kocaeli University
Discussant: Can Zeyrek, University of Marburg

Location: 211 (Old Library of University of Warsaw)
Capacity of 50 people

Presentations

Approaches to Political Islam in Turkey: A Gramscian Challenge
Gorkem Altinors
University of Nottingham, United Kingdom; ldxga5@nottingham.ac.uk
Political Islam as elite Ideology in Turkish Foreign Policy-Making?
Zenon Tziarras
University of Warwick, United Kingdom; z.tziarras@warwick.ac.uk
Turkey’s Political Islam and the West
Galip Dalay
SETA Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research, Turkey; galip.dalay@gmail.com
Turkey’s Recent Foreign Policy and Davutoğlu’s Role as an Islamic Intellectual
Istar Gozaydin
Dogus University, Istanbul, Turkey; isavasir@dogus.edu.tr

FD06-6: IR and Islam: Arab Spring, Democracy, and Islamist Conceptions of Political Life

Theme: One International Relations or Many? Multiple Worlds, Multiple Crises
Wednesday 18 – Saturday 21 September 2013
Warsaw, Poland
Organised by the ECPR Standing Group on International Relations and EISA in cooperation with the Institute of International Relations, University of Warsaw and the Polish Association for International Studies.

Critical Relations between International Relations and Islam
Section Chair: Nassef Manabilang Adiong

FD06-6: IR and Islam: Arab Spring, Democracy, and Islamist Conceptions of Political Life

Time:

Friday, 20/Sep/2013:

4:30pm – 6:15pm

Chair: Rolin G. Mainuddin, North Carolina Central University
Discussant: Jan Wilkens, University of Hamburg

Location: 211 (Old Library of University of Warsaw)
Capacity of 50 people

Presentations

Modernity, Secularism and ‘Islamic’ Conceptions of Democracy: The Case of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt
Katerina Dalacoura
London School of Economics, United Kingdom; K.Dalacoura@lse.ac.uk
The Islamist discourse under scrutiny in the aftermath of the Arab Spring: an analysis of key Islamist conceptions of political life
Maria do Céu Pinto
University of Minho, Portugal; mceupinto@gmail.com
“Foreign Policy Dynamics of Regime Change from the Arab Spring: Is There An Islamist Threat?”
Rolin G. Mainuddin
North Carolina Central University, United States of America; rmainuddin@nccu.edu