Browsing International Relations by Title
Now showing items 81-99 of 99
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Securitization of disinformation in NATO’s lexicon: A computational text analysis
(Center for Foreign Policy and Peace Research, İhsan Doğramacı Peace Foundation, 2022-07)Following the Russian meddling in the 2016 US elections, disinformation and fake news became popular terms to help generate domestic awareness against foreign information operations globally. Today, a large number of ... -
Sources of ai innovation: More than a U.S.-China rivalry
(Transatlantic Policy Quarterly, 2023)Many experts frame the debates around AI technology as a great power rivalry between the U.S. and China. Indeed, by most measures, the United States and China lead the world in AI innovation. Yet focusing solely on the ... -
Spatial reason of the state: the role of space in protest repression in Turkey
(Taylor & Francis, 2023)Between 2007 and 2019 the Turkish regime used protest bans extensively in order to impede collective mobilization. In this paper, drawing on Michel Foucault’s discussion of raisond’état and an original dataset of protest ... -
Status quo conservatism, placation, or partisan division? Analysing citizen attitudes towards financial reform in the United States
(Taylor & Francis, 2019-05-04)Within the literature on financial governance a key question is why the 2008 financial crisis did not elicit a stronger regulatory reaction than it did - the 'post-crisis stasis' puzzle. We explore a neglected dimension ... -
Stepping into the global: Turkish professionals, employment in transnational corporations, and aspiration to transnational forms of cultural capital
(Sage, 2018-05)This article explores the narratives of professionals from Turkey working in transnational corporations to contribute to discussions of new middle classes and global stratification focusing on emerging forms of cultural ... -
The strategic logic of digital disinformation: Offence, defence and deterrence in information warfare
(Taylor & Francis, 2023-01-01)Why do countries engage in disinformation campaigns even though they know that they will likely be debunked later on? We explore a core puzzle in information warfare in which countries that pursue disinformation to confuse ... -
The strategic use of narratives and governance of the COVID-19 pandemic in major autocratisers in Europe
(Taylor & Francis, 2024)By the end of 2022, scholars had published heavily on authoritarian consolidation at the time of COVID-19 and explored how governments adopted measures weakening democratic checks and balances yet strengthened their regimes ... -
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Technology and social theory
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012-10)More than twenty-five years ago social theorist Randall Collins aptly pointed out that technology was one of sociology’s “unexplored dark spots.” Had he then perused the pages of Technology and Culture, he could have noted ... -
Turkey and Russia: Historical patterns and contemporary trendsin bilateral relations
(Oxford University Press, 2020-07-09)Turkish-Russian relations have had a tumultuous history characterized by periods of tensions and conflicts but also intense cooperation. This chapter uses a theoretically guided narrative of Turkish-Russian relations to ... -
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Turkey's position on IDP properties: lessons (not) learned
(Wiley, 2017-10)Three issues: security, economics and justice, are the keys to comprehending the essence of problems of property and IDP return in conflict settings. The case of Turkey presents an interesting framework for analysing issues ... -
TURKEY: Governing the Unpredictable through Market Imperative
(Taylor and Francis, 2022)This chapter analyzes Turkey’s handling of the COVID-19 crisis, arguing that Turkey’s authoritarian regime type rather than populism per se is the central factor in making sense of its crisis response. The key features of ... -
Using social media to monitor conflict-related migration: A review of implications for A.I. forecasting
(MDPI, 2022-09)Following the large-scale 2015–2016 migration crisis that shook Europe, deploying big data and social media harvesting methods became gradually popular in mass forced migration monitoring. These methods have focused on ... -
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War and peace in the age of corona: an analysis of support for repressive state policies in divided societies
(Taylor & Francis, 2022-03-15)Unlike various natural disasters that some studies have highlighted as potential contributors to peace, the threat posed by the COVID-19 pandemic is neither short-term nor regionally confined. Thus, rather than invoking a ... -
When elites polarize over polarization: Framing the polarization debate in Turkey
(Cambridge University Press, 2018-11)This article aims to explore the views of the Turkish elite on the state of polarization in Turkey. By identifying four political frames-namely, harmony, continuity/decline, conspiracy, and conflict-that selected Turkish ... -
Who rules the world? A portrait of the global leadership class
(Cambridge University Press, 2019-12)It goes without saying that "leaders rule." And it stands to reason that the background characteristics of leaders affect the way they rule. Who are the leaders of the world? We generate a composite portrait of the global ... -
Why so timely? Politics of representation and its entanglement in presentism
(Sage, 2020-02-01)What gives representation its democratic essence? The recent democratic theory literature, particularly spearheaded by Nadia Urbinati, defends representative mediation as a facilitator of ongoing democratic contestation ...
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