14 results
Search Results
2. Tourism and the shadow economy: Long-run and short-run implications for resource allocation.
- Author
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Kahyalar, Neslihan, Seetaram, Neelu, and Fethi, Sami
- Subjects
INFORMAL sector ,RESOURCE allocation ,TOURISM impact ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,BUSINESS size ,ECONOMIES of scale - Abstract
This paper is one of the first which provides an in-depth quantitative analysis of how the development of the tourism industry impacts on the size of the shadow economy of a specific destination. The paper employs time-series techniques and annual data from 1960 to 2018 from Turkey. First, the size of the shadow economy is estimated using the electricity consumption method. The estimates are then used to assess the effect of tourism development on the size of the shadow economy. The findings show that there is a negative relationship between the two. A 1% increase in international tourism arrivals leads to a 0.21% and 0.316% fall in the size of the shadow economy in the short-run and long-run respectively. It implies that as the tourism sector develops, it becomes instrumental in modernising the Turkish economy leading to the movement of resources from the shadow economy to the formal sector. In the long-run the effect of the tourism industry in reducing the size of the shadow economy surpasses that of the financial sector of Turkey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Theorizing and mapping media ownership networks in authoritarian-populist contexts: a comparative analysis of Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, and Turkey.
- Author
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Schnyder, Gerhard, Radl, Marlene, Toth, Fanni, Kucukuzun, Melek, Turnšek, Tjaša, Çelik, Burçe, and Pajnik, Mojca
- Subjects
INFORMATION dissemination ,SOCIAL network analysis ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SOCIAL networks ,DISCURSIVE practices - Abstract
This paper aims to contribute to the ongoing discussions on authoritarian populism and the media, from the lens of the political economy of ownership. In contrast to studies that consider the link between media and authoritarian populism by focusing on the discursive structures of populist communication, this study analyses changes in the structure of news media ownership in four European countries that have been subject to authoritarian populism. By employing social network analysis, a methodology rarely used in media ownership research, we reveal how news media ownership concentration as well as changes in ownership structures have provided favorable conditions for the rise and endurance of authoritarian populism. Our study covers ownership developments during the period 2000 to 2020, in Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, and Turkey where authoritarian populist tendencies have been evident, albeit to varying degrees. Conclusions are drawn to illustrate how authoritarian populist actors in the sample countries not only capitalize on prevailing news media ownership structures, but also proactively intervene in ownership relations in order to increase influence over the diffusion of information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessment of variables determining the health management departments' efficiency with analytical hierarchy process.
- Author
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Yesilaydin, Gozde and Tarcan, Menderes
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL roles ,PROFESSIONAL peer review ,PUBLISHING ,HEALTH services administration ,ANALYTIC hierarchy process ,JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,SERIAL publications ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,UNDERGRADUATES ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,QUALITY assurance ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,EDUCATORS ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
This study was conducted to determine the variables that play a role in the efficiency of Health Management departments in Turkey and the ranking of them in order of importance. These variables were determined by systematic analysis. The Prisma method was used in the systematic analysis approach. Input and output variables used in studies assessing the efficiency of higher education institutions in the literature were listed. The ranking of these variables was determined by Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) method. The questionnaire used for the AHP analysis and the judgments of 127 academicians working in Health Management Departments in universities in Turkey were assessed. The first three input variables found as a result of the AHP were "the number of registered undergraduate students per faculty member", "the number of faculty members", and "the number of other academic staff". The most important three output variables included "the number of articles searched on SCI, SSCI, SCI-E", "the number of papers presented in international congresses", and "the count of publications published in international peer-reviewed journals". To achieve positive developments in the efficiency of Health Management Departments, it is recommended to carry out studies to increase the number of qualified publications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Multimodal online dissident culture in Instagram: A critique of the Turkish economy.
- Author
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Arda, Balca and Baş, Özen
- Subjects
VIRTUAL culture ,CONTEXTUAL analysis ,GROUP formation ,MASS surveillance ,AUTUMN ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Ever-present mass surveillance has blocked the flourishing of a traditional dissident culture in Turkey. Focusing on popular 'just for fun' Instagram accounts during the lira's freefall that began in the autumn of 2021, this study seeks to identify the creative strategies for digital social resistance embedded in multimodal content sharing of posts, which are composed of visuals, text, and sound. For this, we employed a multimodal-type analysis of Instagram posts regarding Turkey's economic crisis, followed by an interpretative content analysis aiming to (1) identify, categorize, and compile a typology of the main countersurveillance strategies inherent in multimodal posts, such as memes, edited videos, and animations, Photoshop-crafted still images, and (2) explore the contextual traits of the connected dissident culture. We discuss how these multimodal-type posts support connected dissident group formation while maintaining confidentiality while criticizing governmental conduct of economic policy making in Turkey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. From empire to nation: Management of religious pluralism in the Ottoman Empire and Turkey.
- Author
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Çevik, Salim
- Subjects
CULTURAL pluralism ,RELIGIOUS diversity ,OTTOMAN Empire ,GULEN movement ,IMPERIALISM ,NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The transition from empire to nation-state poses challenges in managing religious and ethnic pluralism. Empires, characterized by hierarchical structures and diversity, contrast with nation-states, which aim for uniformity and unity. As empires modernize administratively, they grapple with different approaches to pluralism. While Habsburgs were more in favor of a federal plurality, the Romanovs pushed for centralization and assimilation. Throughout the nineteenth century, the Ottomans vacillated between these two alternative paths. This vacillation is most evident in their approach to millet system which simultaneously followed the contradictory policies of undermining millet boundaries in order to promote a sense of unity across the multi-faith society and policies of promoting and safeguarding the privileges and group-specific rights of non-Muslim communities. Ottoman nationalism eventually shifted towards a homogenizing model, akin to the Romanov approach, leading to the exclusion of religious minorities. This process of homogenization continued in the nationalist policies of modern Turkey and resulted in the secular Turkish Republic being less tolerant towards non-Muslims than the Islamic Ottoman Empire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Literature and the legacy of Empire: Approaching Turkey's post-imperial condition through Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar.
- Author
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Chovanec, Johanna
- Subjects
WORLD War I ,NATION building ,CITIES & towns ,OTTOMAN Empire ,IMPERIALISM - Abstract
How does literature engage with the legacies of Empire? This article examines how imperial decline and nation building are reflected in textual production after the First World War. With Turkey as a case study, it focuses on the post-imperial narrative as a form of narration dealing with the experience of imperial loss, political contingency and possibilities of national belonging. I argue that Turkey's post-imperial condition is shaped by coming to terms with the loss of the Ottoman Empire, on the one hand, and a nationalising present embedded in the experience of Western-dominated modernity, on the other. Against this backdrop, I examine essays from the compilations Yaşadığım Gibi (1970, 'As I lived') and Beş Şehir (1946, 'Five Cities') by Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar, a key intellectual of the early republican era. The analysis of these post-imperial narratives reveals how Tanpınar tries to root Turkey's national modernity in selected elements of the imperial past. For Tanpınar, continuity with (Turkified) imperial heritage is a prerequisite for a strong nation-state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Structure, performance, and crystallization behavior of Turkey leonardite and raw kaolin added polylactic acid composite films.
- Author
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Şen, İbrahim
- Subjects
POLYLACTIC acid ,KAOLIN ,FILLER materials ,MELTING points ,CRYSTALLIZATION ,X-ray diffraction - Abstract
Polylactic acid (PLA) film composites filled with two clays, Raw Kaolin (KAO), an inorganic structure, and Leonardite (LEO), an organic structure, as well as KAO/LEO mixtures, were prepared via solvent casting method. The main aim of this research was to investigate both the individual and the synergetic effects of LEO and KAO; they are incorporated together into a PLA matrix. The influence of these fillers content on the morphological and structural characteristics of the composites was investigated by the DSC, TGA, FT-IR, SEM, XRD, color, haze, and opacity analysis. According to the TGA analysis, significant decreases in Tmax2 were observed with the addition of LEO in PLA. It is also seen in films with KAO/LEO that support this result. Utilizing the solvent casting method, two melting points were formed in PLA films. The P0 film has lower Tg, Tcc, and Tm1 values than other films. However, there were small changes in Tg and Tm2 values in all films. Up to 7.5% amount of LEO and KAO, the mechanical properties of the films improved. The 3L film exhibited the best mechanical properties. The filler materials used were mostly homogeneously distributed, according to the SEM analysis, and as the amount increased, agglomerations were observed in the fillings on the surface. The addition of LEO and KAO changed the surface color, visual appearance, and opacity significantly. The haze values of films are near 100. These film composites have been shown to improve many properties of the P0 film. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Sycophants in 280 characters: Using Twitter to measure the authoritarian sentiment of presidential advisors in Turkey.
- Author
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Schafer, Dean
- Subjects
AUTHORITARIANISM ,SENTIMENT analysis ,COALITION governments ,POLITICAL parties - Abstract
Top-level presidential advisor appointments provide would-be autocrats in backsliding democracies a quick and effective means to coopt elites and assemble an authoritarian coalition. Such appointments represent a mechanism for making promises of patronage that are more credible and more directly under the executive's control than patronage facilitated by their party. Elites who join the executive's coalition via such appointments have incentives to maintain their privileged access and therefore are more likely to match or even surpass the authoritarian sentiment of an autocratic executive. This research uses a sentiment analysis model trained with 2 years of Twitter data—between 2019 and 2021—to compare the authoritarian sentiment of Turkey's major political parties and to examine differences between groups within Turkey's ruling party. The evidence shows that President Erdogan's advisors are significantly more authoritarian than the rest of the party, and, as such, they form an authoritarian vanguard within an already authoritarian party. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Avoiding fallout from terrorist attacks: The role of local politics and governments.
- Author
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Arı, Emine, Bayer, Reşat, Kemahlıoğlu, Özge, and Kural, Ece
- Subjects
LOCAL government ,TERRORISM ,POLITICAL systems ,POLITICAL parties ,NATIONAL security ,VOTING ,MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
Even though violent attacks resulting in civilian fatalities can be seen as constituting failure on the part of the incumbent party to provide security to citizens, governments are not always punished electorally. Rather, at times, they appear to gain votes following terrorist attacks. Here we argue that political parties that can take advantage of their local presence to frame and communicate their narrative in response to terrorism, can better manage to avoid blame and even to emerge victorious in times of violent conflict. The AKP in Turkey is one such important example. Our statistical analyses of municipality-level aggregate election results show that the party not only maintained national incumbency, but even strengthened its predominance in the political system in the face of growing security threats. In municipalities where AKP controlled the local government and hence municipal resources, the party did not lose votes following terrorist attacks. This finding remains even when we consider past voting, regional variations, competitive districts, and ethnicity. Our argument that incumbents can avoid punishment through their capacity to reach out to voters at the local level is also supported by individual-level survey data and the comparison with neighboring municipalities. As such, we highlight how local government control can be consequential for national politics, including periods when security dominates the national agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Management of psychiatric treatments of patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder in the COVID-19 pandemic: A one-year evaluation in the pandemic.
- Author
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Kaya, Hasan, Civan Kahve, Aybeniz, Darben Azarsız, Yagmur, Ayaz Naycı, Nagihan, İleri Akdoğan, Turceun, and Goka, Erol
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of bipolar disorder ,DISEASE progression ,HEALTH policy ,TELEPSYCHIATRY ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHIATRIC drugs ,CROSS-sectional method ,SOCIAL adjustment ,INTERVIEWING ,CIRCADIAN rhythms ,DISEASE relapse ,SYMPTOMS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PATIENT compliance ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,SOCIAL skills ,BIPOLAR disorder ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Objective: The course of bipolar disorder (BD) is sensitive to factors that may disrupt biological and social rhythms. It is important for patients diagnosed with BD to continue their follow-up and treatment during the pandemic due to personal and social effects. This study aimed to evaluate the disease course and treatment compliance of individuals diagnosed with BD during the pandemic. Methods: A total of 267 patients with BD were included in the study. The scales were applied by phone calls. A sociodemographic data form was filled out during the phone interviews. Diagnostic criteria for hypomanic, manic, and depressive episodes in DSM-5 were questioned and recorded through the created form. Results: During the first of the pandemic, a total of 72 (27.0%) patients had a mood episode, of which 56 (21.0%) were manic/hypomanic episodes and 16 (6.0%) depressive episodes. Also, 54.7% of the patients were able to obtain their medications thanks to the extended medication reports. Being unable to use their medications regularly, having a seasonal pattern of disease, and using an increased number of psychotropics were significant predictors of a new episode. While 74.5% of the patients wanted to talk to their psychiatrists online, only 1.1% could reach the psychiatrist online. Discussion: The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic are particularly evident in patients with a seasonal pattern. Telepsychiatry practices should be actively included in clinical practice, and government policies developed for treatment compliance seem important. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Optimizing base isolation system parameters using a fuzzy reinforced butterfly optimization: A case study of the 2023 Kahramanmaras earthquake sequence.
- Author
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Kandemir, Elif Cagda and Mortazavi, Ali
- Subjects
KAHRAMANMARAS Earthquake, Turkey & Syria, 2023 ,OPTIMIZATION algorithms ,EARTHQUAKES ,GROUND motion ,BUTTERFLIES ,BASE isolation system - Abstract
This study aims to obtain the viable parameters of base isolation systems that are utilized in buildings with seismic isolation and specially located in Turkey. To provide a more accurate representation of real-world scenarios, the study accounts for severe ground motion records simultaneously during the dynamic response analysis of the structure. Three records are taken from the 2023 Turkey earthquake (records for Elbistan, Nurdagi, and Pazarcik). The optimization model's objective function is to minimize the ratio of the roof acceleration to the peak ground acceleration. To ensure realistic outcomes, certain isolation parameters are constrained, such as maintaining the damping ratio and period within a predetermined range as well as the maximum lateral drift of the structure. An upgraded variant of the Butterfly Optimization Algorithm, known as the Fuzzy Butterfly Optimization Algorithm (FBOA), is employed to address the presented optimization model. The FBOA technique incorporates a fuzzy decision-making mechanism that adjusts its search strategy according to the prevailing conditions of the present problem. In addition, the FBOA method utilizes a new auxiliary vector called virtual butterfly, which provides information on the entire population based on each agent's quality. Consequently, FBOA transforms into a self-regulating search algorithm, eliminating the requirement for any external parameters. Results have verified the effectiveness of FBOA in detecting optimal parameters of the proposed isolation system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Tweeting apart: Democratic backsliding, new party cleavage and changing media ownership in Turkey.
- Author
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Metin, Omer Faruk and Ramaciotti Morales, Pedro
- Subjects
AUTHORITARIANISM ,POLITICAL parties ,POLITICAL systems ,CONSERVATISM ,SECULARISM ,POLITICAL opposition - Abstract
Turkey plunges headlong into democratic backsliding under Erdoğan's presidency. The country was a forerunner in the decline of democratic standards in a decade from 2010 to 2020. In the first part of the article, we investigate how this democratic erosion suspends Turkey's long-standing traditional party cleavage between religious conservatism and secularism. By tracing individuals who follow the members of the Turkish parliament on Twitter, we attach the deputies to their followers with the help of correspondence analysis. We illustrate that, as the ethnic identity divide remains significant, democracy-authoritarianism cleavage becomes the main party split that brings the supporters of an ideologically diverse group of opposition parties closer. In the second part, we conceptualize the democracy-authoritarianism divide as the main cleavage in Turkish party politics after 2017 to shed light on how the AKP's different tactics of capturing traditional media generated a partisan media landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Breaking the chains of television: Streaming and the 'Netflix effect' in Turkey.
- Author
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Ildır, Aslı
- Subjects
STREAMING video & television ,TURKISH history ,SOCIAL control ,CULTURAL pluralism ,TELEVISION - Abstract
Scarcity is the defining characteristic of television's history in Turkey due to the late arrival of a multi-channel structure, and the experience of television in Turkey is shaped by the extensive involvement of the government and the high level of social control over broadcasting. The dissatisfaction during the pre-streaming era among the audiences in Turkey started to intensify by early 2010s because of the formulaic and similar stories with no diversity, strict regulation and censorship, and the tediousness of long, slow-paced series and extended ad breaks. The arrival of streaming services in 2016–17 was initially disruptive of the strictly regulated market due to the lack of necessary laws for regulating online streaming. Streaming continues to be a significant alternative for producers/creators and audiences in Turkey, with increased political and cultural diversity in local stories and the emergence of diverse genres and formats with different aesthetic tendencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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