ABSTRACT

Analyzing Turkey’s electoral geography, this volume evaluates the geographical repercussions of the elections in Turkey since the establishment of multiparty politics in 1950. The book focuses on the last two decades, examining the interaction between electoral behavior and regional dynamics.

Various issues related to the geographical connotations of Turkish electoral politics are qualitatively and quantitatively addressed by scholars with diverse backgrounds in social sciences. The chapters herein examine how Turkey’s electoral geography has been shaped over the years to correspond with a certain aspect of multiparty politics, such as voting behaviors, political parties and party systems, nationalization and regionalization, redistricting, gender issues, identity dynamics, or ideological polarization. This comprehensive work contributes to the theoretical debates in electoral geography in general. Utilizing notions from electoral geography literature, this book develops new concepts through the Turkish case.

Filling an important gap in the literature on Turkish politics, this contemporary analysis will be a key resource to policymakers, students, and scholars interested in political science, Turkey, and the Middle East.

chapter 3|20 pages

Gerrymandering in Turkish elections since 1950

(Re)setting the rules of the game?

chapter 6|20 pages

“Where are they doing politics?”

Women’s cooperatives as sites of constellations of power

chapter 7|31 pages

Election monitoring organizations in view of electoral geography

Regional characteristics of volunteer networks in Turkey

chapter 8|30 pages

Engendering the parliament

A study of women deputies in Turkey, 1935–2018 1

chapter 9|19 pages

An analysis of Turkish overseas electoral districts

Opportunities and challenges 1