Ideology, political agenda, and conflict: A comparison of american, european, and turkish legislatures' discourses on kurdish question

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2017

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Center for Foreign Policy and Peace Research, Ihsan Dogramaci Peace Foundation

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Combining discourse analysis with quantitative methods, this article compares how the legislatures of Turkey, the US, and the EU discursively constructed Turkey's Kurdish question. An examination of the legislative-political discourse through 1990 to 1999 suggests that a country suffering from a domestic secessionist conflict perceives and verbalizes the problem differently than outside observers and external stakeholders do. Host countries of conflicts perceive their problems through a more security-oriented lens, and those who observe these conflicts at a distance focus more on the humanitarian aspects. As regards Turkey, this study tests politicians' perceptions of conflicts and the influence of these perceptions on their preexisting political agendas for the Kurdish question, and offers a new model for studying political discourse on intra-state conflicts. The article suggests that a political agenda emerges as the prevalent dynamic in conservative politicians' approaches to the Kurdish question, whereas ideology plays a greater role for liberal/pro-emancipation politicians. Data shows that politically conservative politicians have greater variance in their definitions, based on material factors such as financial, electoral, or alliance-building constraints, whereas liberal and/or left-wing politicians choose ideologically confined discursive frameworks such as human rights and democracy.

Description

Keywords

Conflict discourse analysis, Intra-state conflict, Kurdish question, Legislative politics

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

1

WoS Q

Scopus Q

Q2

Source

All Azimuth

Volume

6

Issue

1

Start Page

49

End Page

82