Baskın Oran

Turkish Foreign Policy, 1919-2006

Turkish Foreign Policy

Turkish Foreign PolicyEdited by Baskin Oran
Utah Series in Middle East Studies

At the intersection of many powerful global forces, modern Turkey—a region of enduring interest for power politics—has often been treated as peripheral to other fields of study such as Europe, Russia, or China. Shaped by the crossing of cultures and traditions between Europe and Asia, this land has felt the influence of several great world-historical civilizations and empires, as well as Orthodox Christianity, Catholicism, Protestantism, Judaism, and Islam.

Already a classic textbook in Turkey, Turkish Foreign Policy is the only comprehensive work that covers Turkish foreign policy from the end of Ottoman rule in 1919 to the present. Now translated into English, this book, as a study of Turkish foreign policy, incorporates nearly all major issues, factors, and interactions. The contributors are among the most distinguished scholars in Turkey specializing in Turkish foreign policy.

Turkish Foreign Policy will be a critical source of information for specialists in international relations, readers interested in Turkey, and students who need clear information and insightful analyses.

Baskin Oran is professor emeritus of international relations at Ankara University.

Mustafa Aksin is the former Turkish ambassador to the United Nations.

Table of Contents:
List of Figures, Maps, Tables, and Boxes
Preface
Introduction: Turkish Foreign Policy in Theory and Practice

Section 1. 1919–1923: The Time of Liberation
Section 2. 1923–1939: Relative Autonomy–1
Section 3. 1939–1945: Relative Autonomy–2
Section 4. 1945–1960: Turkey in the Orbit of the Western Bloc–1
Section 5. 1960–1980: Relative Autonomy–3
Section 6. 1980–1990: Turkey in the Orbit of the Western Bloc–2
Section 7. 1990–2001: Turkey in the Orbit of Globalization
Section 8. 2001–2006: Turkey in the Chaotic Aftermath of 9/11

Contributors
Index
Detailed Contents

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