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Edward P. Djerejian Center for the Middle East | Journal

Does Housing Create Votes? Explaining the Electoral Success of the AKP in Turkey

February 22, 2016 | Melissa Marschall, Abdullah Aydogan, Alper Bulut
Map centered on Turkey

Table of Contents

Author(s)

Melissa Marschall

Former Faculty Scholar

Abdullah Aydogan

Former Research Scholar

Alper Bulut

Karadeniz Technical University

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Abstract

In this paper we examine the rise and consolidation of the Justice and Development Party (Adelet ve Kalinma Partisi, AKP) by analyzing its success in local elections. Our examination of the durability of the AKP takes into account existing explanations of Turkish electoral politics such as economic voting, center-periphery relations, and traditional party cleavages, as well as the clientelistic tendencies of Turkish parties. We argue that the intensification of neo-liberal economic policies encouraged the AKP to seek alternative sources for distributive politics, which it found in Turkey's Mass Housing Administration (TOKİ). Using political, economic, and socio-demographic data for 900 municipal districts in Turkey, we empirically analyze the relationship between TOKİ financed housing projects and the AKP's success in the three mayoral elections between 2004 and 2014. Our results show that while traditional explanations of Turkish party voting account for some of the AKP's success, distributive politics in the form of TOKİ housing projects is a stronger predictor of the party's durability.

Read the full article in Electoral Studies.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2016.02.010
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