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The author draws attention to the strong state tradition and the
pluralistic society that both prevailed in Turkey. He argues that
the Turkish state tradition envisages centralization, social
cohesion and an obedient political culture. Through the
modernization process of the last century, it has tried to change
the society from top to down, and built an ideological and
unitarian public sphere. However, the transition to multi-party
system in 1950 and the liberalization policies that followed in the
post-1980s have prepared the ground for different social movements
to come into existence in the same public arena. Social movements
which developed particularly among Kurds, Alevis and women
emphasize social diversity, pluralism, participation, limited
authority, freedom and human rights. They, thus, have paved the way
for the transformation of the ideological public sphere into a
plural and a civil public domain. The author follows the traces of
all these developments from the Ottoman Empire to the last decades
of the Republican Turkey. Moving from the case of Turkey he makes
an important contribution to the literature on various issues such
as civil society, public sphere, modernization, democracy, and
social movements.
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