Siyaset Bilimi ve Uluslararası İlişkiler Bölümü Yayın Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12416/249
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Book Part Turkish Decision-Making and the Balkans: Implications of Role Theory(Peter Lang AG, 2015) Ekinci, D.The once-and-for-all change in the end of 1980s brought with it new states in the Balkans, which propelled renewed Turkish policy formulation vis-à-vis the region. The post-Cold War timeline of Turkish-Balkan relations demonstrated foreign-policy attitudes taking shape differently compared to Cold War period due to mutually evolving role identifications and role prescriptions of actors, on which the conceptual baggage of role theory offers a germane framework for enquiry. Changes in role conceptions in Turkey's Balkan relations after 1990 were neither limitless nor thoroughly radical. Relations with the region were undisputedly taken further after the Cold War, and yet remained low-key compared to relations with other neighbouring regions. © Peter Lang GmbH Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften Frankfurt am Main 2015. All rights reserved.Article The Implications Of The Karabagh Conflict In The Context Of BSEC As A Regionalism Case(2019) Ekinci, F. DidemMevcut çalışma, bölgeselcilik kavramsallaştırması üzerinden Karadeniz Ekonomik İşbirliği Örgütü (KEİ) bağlamında Karabağ çatışmasının etkisi ve yansımalarını araştırmaktadır. Karabağ çatışmasının, tesis edilmesinden itibaren KEİ’nin duraksamasının başat nedeni olduğu temel savı çerçevesinde, öncelikle bölge ve bölgeselcilik kavramlarına ilişkin özet bir açıklama sunmaktadır. İkinci olarak, KEİ’nin doğuşu, evrimi ve duraksamasına dair bilgi vermektedir. Üçüncü olarak, ulusal ve uluslararası haber arşivlerinden elde edilen veriler temelinde Karabağ çatışmasının yansımalarını incelemektedir. Dördüncü olarak, söz konusu verilerin, bölgeselcilik dahilindeki ilgili alt savlar temelinde yorumlanmasına çalışılmaktadır. Nihai tahlilde, Karabağ çatışmasının devamlılığı dikkate alındığında, KEİ’nin gelecekte yüksek durağanlık olasılığı teyit edilmektedirArticle Citation - Scopus: 6Economic Growth - Inflation Nexus and Its Impact on the Development of the Automotive Industry: the Case of Turkey(Inderscience Publishers, 2019) Gökmen, A.; Üstündağ, K.; Dinç, D.T.Economic growth is essential for development and welfare of the citizens of a country. Economic development is an intact process involving potentially entire industries in a state. Also, economic growth is associated with macroeconomic indicators such as GDP, exports, imports, budget surplus or deficits, current account balance, interest and inflation rates. Nonetheless, inflation is an important macroeconomic indicator which can influence industrial development positively or negatively. Moreover, the aim of this study is to analyse the impact of inflation on the total automotive industry production in the Republic of Turkey resting on various econometric applications as JJ cointegration test, VECM, Wald test, Gtranger test and LSM. Copyright © 2019 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd.Article Turkey between the Balkans and the Caucasus in the Post-Cold War Era: ‘insulator’1 or player state?(Çankaya Üniversitesi, 2010) Ekinci, DidemAs regionalization became a new trend after 1990, Turkey’s longstanding relations with the Balkans and the Caucasus unfolded in an altered context. While Turkey had fulfilled its role mostly as an insulator between the two regions due to the polarized structure of the international system for nearly fifty years as part of the Western camp, renewed Turkish interest towards both regions carried with it motivations shaped by certain commonalities. In turn, these commonalities were functional in transforming Turkey’s previous role from an insulator state into a player in these regions. These rested on, but were not limited to, Turkey’s alliance with the US, both regions’ efforts of Euro – Atlantic integration, Turkey’s common past with the two regions, and the rather new cooperation area of energy. In retrospect, parallel disintegration processes in both regions were two test cases for Turkey’s new post-Cold War position as a player and future prospects give hints that Turkey’s new role is not likely to be reversed
