Order and compromise : government practices in Turkey

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Essays POLITICAL SCIENCE / Government / General POLITICAL SCIENCE / Government / National POLITICAL SCIENCE / Reference Politics and government Turkey
Brill
2015
EISBN 9789004289857
Order and Compromise: Government Practices in Turkey from the Late Ottoman Empire tothe Early 21st Century; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables and Figures; List of Abbreviations; List of Contributors; Introductory Note; 1: Order and Compromise: The Concrete Realities of Public Action in Turkey and the Ottoman Empire; 2: Defective Agency; 3: Is It Time to Stop Speaking about Ottoman Modernisation?; 4: The Linguist and the Politician: The Türk Dil Kurumu and the Field of Power in the 1930-40s
11: The Incomplete Civil Servant?: The Figure of the Neighbourhood Headman (Muhtar)12: Military Domination by Donations; 13: Women's Shelters as State Institutions; 14: The Socialisation of Those Called up for "Training in the Love of the Motherland" as Part of Military Service in Turkey; 15: Officialdom and the Woman Who Was "Meant to Be Dead": The Ethnography of an Exfoliation; 16: Deceptive Agency; Bibliography; Index
5: An Imposed or a Negotiated Laiklik?: The Administration of the Teaching of Islam in Single-Party Turkey6: "The Military Seize the Law": The Drafting of the 1961 Constitution; 7: Institutional Cooperation and Substitution: The Ottoman Police and Justice System at the Turn of the 19th and 20th Centuries; 8: The State without the Public: Some Conjectures about the Administration for Collective Housing (TOKİ); 9: Heritage as a Category of Public Policy in the Southeastern Anatolia Region; 10: European Policies to Support "Civil Society": Embodying a Form of Public Action
Order and Compromise questions the historicity of government practices in Turkey from the late Ottoman Empire onwards. Its discussion of state-society relations reveals how political and administrative institutions are being framed by constant interactions with other social realms.
11: The Incomplete Civil Servant?: The Figure of the Neighbourhood Headman (Muhtar)12: Military Domination by Donations; 13: Women's Shelters as State Institutions; 14: The Socialisation of Those Called up for "Training in the Love of the Motherland" as Part of Military Service in Turkey; 15: Officialdom and the Woman Who Was "Meant to Be Dead": The Ethnography of an Exfoliation; 16: Deceptive Agency; Bibliography; Index
5: An Imposed or a Negotiated Laiklik?: The Administration of the Teaching of Islam in Single-Party Turkey6: "The Military Seize the Law": The Drafting of the 1961 Constitution; 7: Institutional Cooperation and Substitution: The Ottoman Police and Justice System at the Turn of the 19th and 20th Centuries; 8: The State without the Public: Some Conjectures about the Administration for Collective Housing (TOKİ); 9: Heritage as a Category of Public Policy in the Southeastern Anatolia Region; 10: European Policies to Support "Civil Society": Embodying a Form of Public Action
Order and Compromise questions the historicity of government practices in Turkey from the late Ottoman Empire onwards. Its discussion of state-society relations reveals how political and administrative institutions are being framed by constant interactions with other social realms.
