ABSTRACT

The issue of minority rights is highly contested in both member and candidate states of the European Union. Compared with other policy areas, the Europeanization process in minority rights is much slower and more problematic. Turkey, though, differs from the majority of the member states by showing positive development, although admittedly it is still characterised by both accelerations and slowdowns.

This book examines how minority protection, as a highly sensitive and controversial issue, is promoted or constrained in the EU’s neighbourhood, by focusing on the case of Turkey. It draws on current external Europeanization theories and suggests a rationalist model comprising both the role of the EU and also domestic factors. It integrates two models of external Europeanization provided by Schimmelfennig and Sedelmier (2005), i.e. the external incentives and lesson-drawing models, and the framework of the pull-and-push model of member state Europeanization by Börzel (2000), to derive a comprehensive model for external Europeanization. The book argues that the push by EU conditionality and the pull by domestic dissatisfaction are influential in promoting change. Without one or the other, domestic change remains incomplete, as it is either shallow or selective.

Focusing on the Turkish case, the book enhances the theoretical understanding of external Europeanization by shifting focus away from EU conditionality to voluntarily driven change, and by providing a theoretical model that is applicable to other countries. It will therefore be a valuable resource for students and scholars studying minority rights and Turkish and European ethnic politics.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Exploring the puzzle of minority rights

chapter 1|14 pages

Theorizing Europeanization through enlargement

Pull-and-push model

chapter 4|14 pages

Push without pull in 1999–2004

EU conditionality triggers the reforms

chapter 5|14 pages

Transition to pull without push in 2005–2007

From the EU to the ‘domestic’

chapter 6|17 pages

Pull without push in 2008–2014

Drift from the EU and rule by the ‘domestic’

chapter 7|17 pages

Alternative explanations

chapter |6 pages

Conclusions and prospects