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New Turkey's Other Turks Abroad: A Brief Critical Reading of the Erdoğan Regime's Kin-State Policy toward Turks of North Macedonia

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  • Gözübenli, Abdullah Sencer

Abstract

In post-imperial kin-states, the combination of authoritarian rule and selective historical memory in home-states of their kin-minorities have led to a dangerous brand of ethnic politics. Turkey has trouble defining both its kin societies in the Balkans and the policies directed at them. Nonetheless, Erdoğan's kin-state actions since his ruling party came into power in 2002 divide and polarize Balkan Turks and Muslims. In this respect, this article builds on how the religious-oriented and political polarization exported from the kin-state affects the national identity of its kin-minority in ethnically divided society, in the context of Rogers Brubaker's well-known triadic nexus. This article aims to take a brief look at the division and polarization of Balkan Turks and Muslims, especially in North Macedonia, which emerged as a result of Turkey’s transnational identity policies.

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  • Gözübenli, Abdullah Sencer, 2023. "New Turkey's Other Turks Abroad: A Brief Critical Reading of the Erdoğan Regime's Kin-State Policy toward Turks of North Macedonia," SocArXiv jngv3, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:jngv3
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/jngv3
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    1. Mikko Lagerspetz, 2014. "Cultural Autonomy of National Minorities in Estonia: The Erosion of a Promise," Journal of Baltic Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 45(4), pages 457-475, October.
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