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Guardianship and Democracy in Iran and Turkey: Tutelary Consolidation, Popular Contestation

Akkoyunlu, Feyzi Karabekir

Authors



Abstract

This book offers the first comparative study of the foundations, consolidation and contestation of regime guardianship in the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Republic of Turkey. For decades, the military in Turkey and the clergy in Iran acted as the guardians of Atatürk and Khomeini’s ideological legacies. At the turn of the 21st century rising popular actors in both countries started challenging the tutelary control of the state and society. While in Turkey the clash between the Kemalist guardians and their Islamist-led rivals resulted in a victory for the latter, although not for democracy, in Iran, traditionalist guardians were able to thwart popular challenges to their authority at the expense of the regime’s democratic legitimacy. How was guardianship established, consolidated and contested in these republics with seemingly inimical founding ideologies? Why did it unravel in Turkey but survive in the Islamic Republic in the early 2010s? And what do these power struggles and their outcomes tell us about political contestation in tutelary hybrid regimes?

Citation

Akkoyunlu, F. K. (2024). Guardianship and Democracy in Iran and Turkey: Tutelary Consolidation, Popular Contestation. Edinburgh University Press. https://doi.org/10.1515/9781399506120

Book Type Authored Book
Acceptance Date Jul 1, 2021
Publication Date Sep 5, 2024
Deposit Date Jun 25, 2022
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Series Title Edinburgh Studies on Modern Turkey
ISBN 9781399506106
DOI https://doi.org/10.1515/9781399506120