Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Çarkoğlu, Ali
Baruh, Lemi
and
Yıldırım, Kerem
2014.
Press-Party Parallelism and Polarization of News Media during an Election Campaign.
The International Journal of Press/Politics,
Vol. 19,
Issue. 3,
p.
295.
Keyman, E. Fuat
and
Gumuscu, Sebnem
2014.
Democracy, Identity, and Foreign Policy in Turkey.
p.
29.
Ciddi, Sinan
and
Esen, Berk
2014.
Turkey's Republican People's Party: Politics of Opposition under a Dominant Party System.
Turkish Studies,
Vol. 15,
Issue. 3,
p.
419.
nii, Ziya
2014.
Monopolizing the Center: The AKP and the Uncertain Path of Turkish Democracy.
SSRN Electronic Journal,
Ayan Musil, Pelin
2015.
Emergence of a Dominant Party System After Multipartyism: Theoretical Implications from the Case of the AKP in Turkey.
South European Society and Politics,
Vol. 20,
Issue. 1,
p.
71.
Çarkoğlu, Alı
and
Aytaç, S. Erdem
2015.
Who gets targeted for vote-buying? Evidence from an augmented list experiment in Turkey.
European Political Science Review,
Vol. 7,
Issue. 4,
p.
547.
Öniş, Ziya
2015.
Monopolising the Centre: The AKP and the Uncertain Path of Turkish Democracy.
The International Spectator,
Vol. 50,
Issue. 2,
p.
22.
Taş, Hakkı
2015.
Turkey – from tutelary to delegative democracy.
Third World Quarterly,
Vol. 36,
Issue. 4,
p.
776.
Krumm, Thomas
2016.
Ein AKP-Effekt im türkischen Parteiensystem?.
Zeitschrift für Politikwissenschaft,
Vol. 26,
Issue. 4,
p.
397.
Somer, Murat
2016.
Understanding Turkey’s democratic breakdown: old vs. new and indigenous vs. global authoritarianism.
Southeast European and Black Sea Studies,
Vol. 16,
Issue. 4,
p.
481.
Sayarı, Sabri
2016.
Back to a Predominant Party System: The November 2015 Snap Election in Turkey.
South European Society and Politics,
Vol. 21,
Issue. 2,
p.
263.
Esen, Berk
and
Gumuscu, Sebnem
2016.
Rising competitive authoritarianism in Turkey.
Third World Quarterly,
Vol. 37,
Issue. 9,
p.
1581.
Çelik, Nihat
and
İşeri, Emre
2016.
Islamically oriented humanitarian NGOs in Turkey: AKP foreign policy parallelism.
Turkish Studies,
Vol. 17,
Issue. 3,
p.
429.
Gidengil, Elisabeth
and
Karakoç, Ekrem
2016.
Which matters more in the electoral success of Islamist (successor) parties – religion or performance? The Turkish case.
Party Politics,
Vol. 22,
Issue. 3,
p.
325.
Hazama, Yasushi
and
Iba, Şeref
2017.
Legislative agenda setting by a delegative democracy: omnibus bills in the Turkish parliamentary system.
Turkish Studies,
Vol. 18,
Issue. 2,
p.
313.
Hazama, Yasushi
2018.
Economic and corruption voting in a predominant party system: The case of Turkey.
Acta Politica,
Vol. 53,
Issue. 1,
p.
121.
Ecevit, Yüksel Alper
and
Kocapınar, Gülnur
2018.
Do Party Lists Matter? Political Party Strategies in Legislative Candidate Nominations1.
Parliamentary Affairs,
Vol. 71,
Issue. 3,
p.
697.
Esen, Berk
and
Gumuscu, Sebnem
2018.
The Perils of “Turkish Presidentialism”.
Review of Middle East Studies,
Vol. 52,
Issue. 1,
p.
43.
Bayulgen, Oksan
Arbatli, Ekim
and
Canbolat, Sercan
2018.
Elite Survival Strategies and Authoritarian Reversal in Turkey.
Polity,
Vol. 50,
Issue. 3,
p.
333.
Castaldo, Antonino
2018.
Populism and competitive authoritarianism in Turkey.
Southeast European and Black Sea Studies,
Vol. 18,
Issue. 4,
p.
467.