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Turkey’s ‘New’ Foreign Policy in the Middle East The Civil Society Factor Harriet Ann Fildes A dissertation submitted in fulfilment of a Ph.D in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies The University of Edinburgh, 2017 Word Count: 99,792 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE Abstract .....................................................................................................................................1 Declaration ................................................................................................................................2 Acknowledgments .....................................................................................................................4 Acronyms ..................................................................................................................................5 CHAPTERS Chapter One – Introduction ....................................................................................................11 Section 1 – Aims and Original Contribution ..........................................................................11 Section 2 – Why Study Civil Society in Turkey .....................................................................13 Section 3 – Defining Civil Society: Organizations and Scope ...............................................16 Section 4 – Literature and Theory...........................................................................................22 Section 5 – Research Design, Sources and Limitations ..........................................................34 Section 6 – Thesis Outline ......................................................................................................39 Chapter Two – Change and Continuity in Turkish Foreign Policy.........................................41 Section 1 – Geopolitics, the Military and the (in)Security Paradigm .....................................44 Section 1.1 – The Cold War Aftermath: New Actors and Dynamics .....................................46 Section 2 – Turkey and the Middle East: From Conflict to Cooperation ...............................49 Section 2.1 – Adventurism to Pragmatism with Northern Iraq ...............................................50 Section 2.2 – Conflict to Coordination with Syria ..................................................................55 Section 2.3 – Traditionalism to Populism with Israel .............................................................60 Section 3 – The AKP era: From a Military to a Multidimensional Foreign Policy ................63 Section 3.1 – Desecuritization and the EU: New Actors in TFP ............................................64 Section 3.2 – A Fine Balance: Relations with East and West .................................................67 Section 3 – Conclusions ..........................................................................................................70 Chapter Three – Business Associations: Tool or Actor in Turkey’s Middle East Relations? 72 Section 1 – The Evolution of Economic Interests in Foreign Relations .................................73 Section 2 – The AKP and the Business Community: Interest and Identity in TFP ................80 Section 2.1 – The Turkish Industrialists’ and Businessmen’s Association.............................81 2 Section 2.11 – Characteristics and aims ..................................................................................82 Section 2.12 – Activities in foreign relations ..........................................................................82 Section 2.2 – The Independent Industrialists and Businessmen Association .........................85 Section 2.21 – Characteristics and aims ..................................................................................85 Section 2.22 – Activities in foreign relations ..........................................................................87 Section 2.3 – The Turkish Confederation of Businessmen and Industrialists ........................91 Section 2.31 – Characteristics and aims ..................................................................................91 Section 2.32 – Activities in foreign relations ..........................................................................92 Section 2.4 – The Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey ......................94 Section 2.41 – Characteristics and aims ..................................................................................95 Section 2.42 – Activities in foreign relations ..........................................................................95 Section 3 – Rapprochement with the Middle East: Impact Assessment .................................97 Section 3.1 – Rapprochement with Syria ................................................................................99 Section 3.2 – Desecuritizing Northern Iraqi Policy ..............................................................104 Section 3.3 – Economic Diplomacy and Israel/ Palestine .....................................................108 Section 4 – Conclusion .........................................................................................................115 Chapter Four – Think Tanks: The Intellectual Backbone of Turkish Foreign Policy ...........119 Section 1 – The Evolution of Think Tank Culture ................................................................121 Section 2 – Think Tanks: Influence and Strategy .................................................................126 Section 2.1 – Civilian experts ...............................................................................................127 Section 2.2 – Informing ........................................................................................................130 Section 2.3 – Agenda setting ................................................................................................133 Section 2.4 – Communication ...............................................................................................135 Section 2.5 – Ideas to influence ............................................................................................137 Section 2.6 – Actual influence? ............................................................................................141 Section 3 – Classifying Think Tanks in Turkey....................................................................142 Section 3.1 – Governmental NGOs (GNGOs) ......................................................................142 Section 3.11 – The International Strategic Research Foundation .........................................143 Section 3.12 – Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research .............................146 3 Section 3.13 – Governmental NGOs or just governmental? .................................................151 Section 3.2 – Independent NGOs ..........................................................................................152 Section 3.21 – The Marmara Foundation ..............................................................................153 Section 3.22 – Istanbul Policy Centre ...................................................................................157 Section 3.3 – Business NGOs ...............................................................................................160 Section 3.31 – TÜSIAD Foreign Policy Forum ....................................................................161 Section 3.32 – Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey ........................................164 Section 4 – The Limits of Influence......................................................................................166 Section 5 – Conclusions ........................................................................................................170 Chapter Five – Faith-based NGOs: Turkey’s Humanitarian Diplomats ...............................175 Section 1 – The Evolution of Faith-based NGOs..................................................................178 Section 2 – Humanitarian Diplomacy in Action: The State, the Community and NGOs .....185 Section 2.1 – The State .........................................................................................................186 Section 2.2 – The Community ..............................................................................................189 Section 2.3 – The NGOs .......................................................................................................192 Section 3.31 – The IHH: Arm of the AKP or autonomous actor? ........................................192 Section 3.32 – Kimse Yok Mu?: The unofficial purveyors of humanitarian diplomacy ......199 Section 3.33 – The Turkish Red Crescent: NGO of
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