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Elizabeth Meehan ‘Best Article’ Prize 2019

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 September 2020

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Abstract

Type
Announcement
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Government and Opposition Limited

On behalf of the editorial board, the editors of Government and Opposition are pleased to announce the winners of the annual ‘best article’ prize, named in memory of long-time editorial board member Elizabeth Meehan (1947–2018). This prize is offered to the non-commissioned, peer-reviewed, original research article published during the previous calendar year that the editorial board members believe best represents the scholarly excellence of the journal and the tradition of commitment to public discourse on important topics in comparative politics that Government and Opposition has maintained for more than fifty years.

The prize-winning article for Volume 54 (2019) is by Professor Ziya Öniş, Koç University in Istanbul and Dr Mustafa Kutlay, City University of London: ‘Global Shifts and the Limits of the EU's Transformative Power in the European Periphery: Comparative Perspectives from Hungary and Turkey’.

This article highlights the weakening of the EU's transformative capacity in the broader European periphery in a rapidly shifting global order, with reference to Hungary and Turkey. Although Hungary is an ‘insider’ and Turkey a relative ‘outsider’, their recent experiences display strikingly similar patterns, raising important concerns about the EU's leverage. Under the influence of strong nationalist-populist leaders backed by powerful majorities, both countries have been moving in an increasingly illiberal direction, away from well-established EU norms. The article proposes an analytical framework based on a combination of push and pull factors that are driven by changing global political economy dynamics, which explains the EU's declining appeal in its periphery, not only in reference to the internal dynamics of European integration and its multiple crises, but also the appeal of illiberal versions of strategic capitalism employed by rising powers, which serve as reference points for the elites of several states in diverse geographic settings.

Öniş Z and Kutlay M (2019). ‘Global Shifts and the Limits of the EU's Transformative Power in the European Periphery: Comparative Perspectives from Hungary and Turkey’. Government and Opposition: An International Journal of Comparative Politics 54(2), 226–253, https://doi.org/10.1017/gov.2017.16.

We are very pleased to have selected this article. It showcases the importance of rigorous, well-embedded, comparative research to any discussion of the limits to the role of the EU as an impetus for economic and political reform. This issue was of central importance to Professor Meehan's work. We especially welcomed the comparison between an EU member state and a candidate for membership, exploring both the insider and the outsider dimensions of the EU's transformative power.