Turkey is a country whose importance is rapidly growing in international affairs. A rapidly developing democratic state with a strong economy, complex society, active party system, and powerful armed forces, Turkey is playing an increasingly critical role in Europe, the Middle East, and the Caucasus.
Given Turkey’s significance and the great interest in studying its history, politics, and foreign policy, Turkish Studies presents a forum for scholarly discussion on these topics and more. Turkish Studies features full-length articles, book reviews, and discussion roundtables covering:
- The history of the Turkish republic, from the 1920s to the present, including political, social, and intellectual issues and developments.
- Turkish politics, including parties, voting patterns, ideologies, biographies, the army and other institutions, as well as the political attitudes of different social groups within the country.
- The composition and policy-making process of Turkish governments, including leading figures and movements.
- Government policies and programs, including economic, religious, social, and all other issues.
- Turkish international relations and foreign policy, including the policy-making process and Turkish relations with all countries, institutions, and movements.
Turkish Studies welcomes manuscript submissions. Please consult our style sheet before sending any materials. All feature articles should be between 5,000 and 7,500 words and submitted via the Turkish Studies ScholarOne Manuscripts site. Correspondence can be directed to Paul Kubicek at turkishstudiesjournal@gmail.com. We welcome queries and proposals for articles. The journal also regularly publishes solicited book reviews. We are happy to receive books on Turkish studies from authors and publishers and we will gladly entertain suggestions about books to review. To suggest a book for review, please contact Yeru Chernilovksy ychernilovsky@idc.ac.il.
Peer Review Statement