Authoritarianism, informal law, and legal hybridity: the Islamisation of the state in Turkey

Chapter 1: Informal Institutions, Unoffical Laws and Legal Hybridity in Turkey -- Chapter 2: Informal Laws, Islamist Legal Hybridity and Its Producers -- Chapter 3: Towards an Islamist Hybrid Family Law -- Chapter 4: Sharia, Legal Hybridity, and Islamization of Social Life -- Chapter 5: Islamist Leg...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yilmaz, Ihsan 1971- (Author)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Singapore Palgrave Macmillan [2022]
In:Year: 2022
Series/Journal:Springer eBook Collection
Further subjects:B Middle East
B Religion And Law
B Party (law)
B Political change
B Rechtspluralismus
B Populism
B Religion
B Islam and politics
B Religion And Politics
B Religions
B Islam—Study and teaching
B Islamization
Online Access: Cover
Presumably Free Access
Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Parallel Edition:Erscheint auch als: 9789811902758
Erscheint auch als: 9789811902772
Erscheint auch als: 9789811902789
Description
Summary:Chapter 1: Informal Institutions, Unoffical Laws and Legal Hybridity in Turkey -- Chapter 2: Informal Laws, Islamist Legal Hybridity and Its Producers -- Chapter 3: Towards an Islamist Hybrid Family Law -- Chapter 4: Sharia, Legal Hybridity, and Islamization of Social Life -- Chapter 5: Islamist Legal Hybridity on Economy -- Chapter 6: Islamist Informal Laws on Corruption -- Chapter 7: Islamist Legal Hybridity on Government and Opposition -- Chapter 8: Authoritarianism, Informal Law, and Legal Hybridity.
This book investigates Turkey’s departure from a ‘flawed democracy’ under Kemalist secularism, and its transitioning into Islamist authoritarian Erdoğanism, through the lenses of informal law, legal pluralism, and legal hybridity. In doing so, it examines the attempts of Turkey’s ruling party (AKP) at social engineering and gradual Islamisation of the Turkish state and society, by using informal Islamist laws. To that end, the book argues that the AKP has paved the way for Islamist legal hybridity where society, state, and law, are being gradually Islamised on an ad hoc basis. Informal law and legal pluralism in Turkey have had a non-state characteristic which have permitted Muslims to solve disputes by seeking the opinions of religio-legal scholars. Yet under the AKP rule, this informal legal system has become increasingly dominated by conservatives, sometimes radical Islamists, which the governing party has taken advantage of by either formalizing some parts of the informal Islamist law, or using it informally to mobilize its supporters against the opposition. Ihsan Yilmaz is Research Professor and Chair at the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia. He has conducted mixed method research on authoritarianism, legal pluralism, nation-building, citizenship, Islam–state–law relations in majority and minority contexts (Turkey, Pakistan, Egypt, Indonesia, UK, USA and Australia), Islamism, populism, transnationalism, ethnoreligious and political minorities, securitisation, and intergroup relations. He was Professor of Political Science at Istanbul Fatih University (2008–2016), Lecturer in Law, Social Sciences and Politics at SOAS, University of London (2001–2008), and a fellow at Centre for Islamic Studies, the University of Oxford (1999–2001).
ISBN:9811902763
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1007/978-981-19-0276-5