Affiliation:
1. BURSA ULUDAĞ ÜNİVERSİTESİ
Abstract
Since 2002, Turkey has actively been seeking a regional power status in the Middle East through the articulation of regional roles based on historical legacy and liberal experience. Theoretically, the paper seeks to contribute to regional power literature by integrating role theory with status-seeking theory and examining the interactions between them. This integrated approach suggests that the role rientations of aspiring regional power and regional counter-roles determine the level of status recognition of that regional power in a given regional power hierarchy. Using this approach, the paper examines the fluctuations in Turkey’s pursuit of regional power status in the Middle East over two uneven stages before and after the Arab Spring. It shows that Turkey was able to play regional cooperative roles and improve its regional power status during the first stage (2002-2011) while has stumbled over the period since the Arab Spring.
Reference16 articles.
1. ADIGBUO, Richard, “Beyond IR Theories: The Case for National Role Concep¬tions.” Politikon, Vol, 34, No, 1,2007,83–97.24
2. AKTÜRK, Şener, “The Fourth Style of Politics: Eurasianism as a Pro-Russian Re¬thinking of Turkey’s Geopolitical Identity.” Turkish Studies, Vol,16.No,1,2015, 54-79.
3. AKTÜRK, Şener, “Turkey’s Role in the Arab Spring and the Syrian Conflict.” Turkish policy quarterly, Vol,15, No, 4, 2017,87–96.
4. “Toward a Turkish-Russian Axis? Conflicts in Georgia, Syria, and Ukraine, and Cooperation over Nuclear Energy.” Insight Turkey, Vol,16, No, 4,2014, 13–22.
5. AKBABA Yasemin, Özgür Özdamar, Role Theory in the Middle East and North Africa, New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.