@article{1484391, author = {Kutlay, Mustafa, and Karaoğuz, H. Emrah,}, url = {http://library.usi.edu/record/1484391}, title = {Development and foreign policy in Turkey : rethinking interconnectedness in a multipolar world /}, abstract = {This book sketches an institutional political economy framework to discuss the interaction between development and foreign policy in the global South with reference to Turkey. The authors argue that although the developmental state framework has commonly been employed to explore domestic economic development processes without analytically focusing on the foreign policy dimension, developmental state institutions are highly relevant in the creation and pursuit of a development-oriented foreign policy at a time of growing uncertainty marred by geopolitical and geoeconomic tensions. The book develops a two-level Regime Coherence Framework to account for the domestic and international dimensions of development-oriented foreign policy. The main argument posits that the development regime in Turkey and associated foreign policies lack coherence, due to weak institutional complementarities between economic governance, state-business relations, and financial statecraft at the domestic-external nexus. Mustafa Kutlay is Senior Lecturer in the Department of International Politics at City, University of London, UK. He works on comparative politics, politics of development, emerging powers, Turkish political economy, and the global South. H. Emrah Karaouz is Assistant Professor in the International Relations department at Kadir Has University, Turkey. His current research focuses on political economy of development, international/comparative political economy, Turkish political economy, and political economy of innovation.}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-12116-6}, recid = {1484391}, pages = {1 online resource (xi, 193 pages) :}, }