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[This chapter presents an alternative framework that diverges from state-centric accounts of “Foreign Policy,” broadening the concept to the direction of what it explains as “foreign policies.” Using examples from the specific case of Turkish Foreign Policy (TFP), the study argues that the realm of foreign policy can extend beyond state-to-state relations, even including relationships between non-state actors. Situating itself within the extant literature on TFP, the chapter aims first to emphasize the lack of interest for actors other than the state in this domain. Second, it calls for a transnational(ist) focus on various issue areas, so that a different but more comprehensive analysis of TFP becomes possible. Simultaneously, it provides a range of cases that demonstrate a number of ways in which dynamics of Turkish foreign policy-making are affected, structured, and cha(lle)nged by these non-state-centric actors.]
Published: May 26, 2020
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