McDonald, Deniz Bingöl2019-06-282019-06-28201131588-97261588-9726https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12469/1510https://doi.org/10.1556/SocEc.2011.0004The Justice and Development Party (AKP) government between 2002 and 2007 managed to accomplish unprecedented economic reforms maintaining 8% growth and passed legislation to change Turkey into a more democratic country in line with the Copenhagen political conditions. After being rewarded with the start of accession negotiations in 2005 and an electoral landslide in 2007 AKP's second term in office is in stark contrast with its earlier days of glory. AKP disengaged itself from the IMF agreement and took EU reforms off the top of its agenda bringing half a decade of political and economic reforms to a halt. The paper argues that AKP utilized the credibility of IMF and EU support to defeat its domestic rivals but once the external incentives lessened AKP turned inwards to consolidate its power and cared for little else. The first part of the paper explores how AKP managed to construct such a broad reform consensus and assesses the role of the external influence. The second part explores why and how this reform consensus fell apart.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessAccession conditionsDemocratizationEconomic reformsEuropean UnionExternal anchorsF36F53F59TurkeyThe AKP story: Turkey's bumpy reform path towards the European UnionArticle52554233310.1556/SocEc.2011.00042-s2.0-84855671498N/AN/A