How Turkey’s Leaders Dismantled the Rule of Law

Turkey’s democracy has suffered a dramatic decline under the seventeenyear rule of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the country’s longest-serving leader. As both a target and weapon of political power, the judiciary has been central to Erdogan’s efforts to dismantle key democratic institutions and es...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Fletcher forum of world affairs 2020-01, Vol.44 (1), p.67-96
1. Verfasser: Tahiroglu, Merve
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Turkey’s democracy has suffered a dramatic decline under the seventeenyear rule of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the country’s longest-serving leader. As both a target and weapon of political power, the judiciary has been central to Erdogan’s efforts to dismantle key democratic institutions and establish an all-powerful presidential system with few checks against executive rule. For over a decade, Turkey’s political elites have systematically undermined the rule of law and strengthened the structural obstacles to judicial independence. To demonstrate the role of the judiciary in enabling Erdogan’s increasingly authoritarian rule, this article traces the multi-layered process through which Erdogan and his allies worked to hollow out and co-opt the courts since 2008. Turkey’s highly politicized judiciary functions today as a primary facilitator of Erdogan’s assaults on the media, political opposition, and civil society. By examining two contemporary case studies—one about the prosecution of civil society leaders, and the other about the prosecution of an opposition party—this article seeks to identify some of the main methods through which Turkey’s ruling elites weaponize the judiciary to neutralize their critics and opponents.
ISSN:1046-1868