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27 J. Pol. Stud. 1 (2020)

handle is hein.journals/jlo27 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Journal of Political Studies, Vol. 27, Issue - 1, 2020, 01:14


   Local  Democracy  as an Instrument  for Socio-Political Change: The Case  of
                                     Turkey

                                 Saifullah Khan

                                     Abstract

The  study focuses the rise of Erdogan and his strategy towards restoring the traditional
Islamic face of Turkish  society without antagonizing its European  neighbors and
avoiding direct confrontation with the dominant Secular Nationalist Troika. The four
consecutive landslide victories for Justice and Development Party (AKP) in national
as well as in local government elections have legitimized Erdogan's initiatives. The
study argues  that it was only local democracy  that first enabled Erdogan to take
initiatives like banning public nudity, restricting consumption of alcohol in public
places and allowing women   to wear head scarf according to Islamic criteria even in
the Europeanized   city like Istanbul and later on, raised Erdogan to the rank  of
President of Turkey where he amended  the national constitution and narrowed the role
of military and state Judiciary in political and administrative affairs of Turkey. The
study draws  a conclusion that when  the national political environment of a highly
centralized state is dominated by specific political elites in such a way that new forces
don't have  any  space to emerge  and  challenge the status quo  than the political
institutions at local levels can be used, beyond their normative  assignments, for
influencing the socio-political behavior of society in desired way.

Keywords:   Erdogan Doctrine, Turkish Society, Local Democracy, Instrument of
Socio-Behavioral Changes.
                                   Introduction
During  the last two decades, the internationalisation of socio-economic and political
activities has challenged the  well-established monopolistic authority of national
governments  to execute state policies and dispersed most of its assignments to local
government  on the idea that it can manage the impacts of globalization better than the
national government. Hence, more  the world is globalized, the more it is going to be
localized (Loughlin,  2007,  pp.4-5). In simple  the  administrative requirements,
managerial demands,  cultural variation and socio-ethnic diversity provide reasonable
justifications for states to have some form of decentralized local government at lowest
local level (Smith, 1985, p.48). Local government literally means the government by
the people of locality, constituted by law and possesses reasonable authority to decide
and  administer a range of public policies within a relatively small territory (Singh,
2009,  p.2). In societies where the national political environment is dominated by
specific political elites in such a way that new forces do not have any space to emerge
and  take part in national policy making process, than the only way to engage  the
deprived segments of society to national politics is the representative local democracy
(Rondinelli,1981, PP-133-145).


*Author is PhD Scholar, Department of Politics and I.R, International Islamic University
Islamabad, Pakistan.

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