
Contents
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Davutoğlu’s “Improbable Ottomanism” Davutoğlu’s “Improbable Ottomanism”
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The Three Stages of Turkish Foreign Policy The Three Stages of Turkish Foreign Policy
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Europeanization and the Market-Led Foreign Policy (2002–2010) Europeanization and the Market-Led Foreign Policy (2002–2010)
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The Arab Spring and Islamization of Foreign Policy (2010–2013) The Arab Spring and Islamization of Foreign Policy (2010–2013)
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Today: The Collapse of Turkey’s Unrealistic Foreign Policy, and the “Splendid Isolation” (from 2013 to Present) Today: The Collapse of Turkey’s Unrealistic Foreign Policy, and the “Splendid Isolation” (from 2013 to Present)
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Conclusion Conclusion
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7 The Neo-Ottoman Foreign Policy of the AKP
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Published:July 2020
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Abstract
This chapter explores the extent of contemporary neo-Ottomanism’s influence in Turkey’s foreign policy and the political infrastructure for implementing it. It examines the dynamic of the mutually constitutive relationship between Islamization and Ottomanization within three stages of Turkish foreign policy: Europeanization (2002–2010); Arab Spring and Islamicization (2010–2013); “Splendid Isolation” (2013–present). The focus of the chapter is Ahmet Davutoğlu, who provided the ideological framework for neo-Ottoman foreign policy. The analysis probes Davutoğlu’s understanding of Ottomanism as Islamist, anti-Western, adventurist, and ideological. This leads to exploring why many pundits and critics of Turkey’s foreign and domestic politics use this specific term as an epithet to signal the gradual Islamicization of domestic politics and the growing presence of Islamic irredentism in foreign policy.
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