This paper explores recent scholarship on the connection between domestic level variables and external factors in shaping foreign policy behaviour. Turkey presents itself as an excellent case through which to explore this puzzle given the combination of strong systemic constraints on its strategic policy, combined with a rapidly changing domestic discourse. Here, the shift away from the ideology of Kemalism and towards a ‘neo-Ottoman’ agenda over the past decade has run parallel to dramatic shifts in regional power.1 I argue that these systemic factors can be linked to various patterns of behaviour by state elites, and develop a neoclassical realist framework which outlines three specific behaviours that point to this process.
History
Publication title
Change and Continuity in the Middle East and Central Asia Conference proceedings
Editors
Adel Abdelghafar
Pagination
1-24
Department/School
School of Social Sciences
Publisher
ANU
Place of publication
Canberra
Event title
Change and Continuity in the Middle East and Central Asia