Elif Uzgören
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Deglobalisation? Reconsidering the struggle under authoritarian neoliberalism
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Chapter 5 revisits the struggle within the conjuncture of global capitalism in the 2010s characterised by deglobalisation, populism and the crisis of neoliberalism. Scholars often describe the political landscape of the 2010s as authoritarian neoliberalism in which the state takes the upper hand to restore capitalist forms of social relations of production. What are the structural factors behind authoritarian neoliberalism and the contradictions of the accumulation strategy of financialisation? The chapter considers coordinates of dependence between the core and periphery and how EU–Turkey relations is redefined in the 2010s. The pull factors of EU membership (political and economic arguments in favour of membership, democracy and economic growth) are increasingly questioned following the 2008 Great Recession in tandem with rising far-right politics in Europe and socio-economic disparities between Europe’s core and periphery. In such a context, what arguments do social forces offer to continue sustaining the pro-membership project? How are Turkish industry’s competitive sectors in manufacturing, such as textiles and the automotive industry, influenced by changes in the global supply chain following the COVID-19 pandemic and rising geostrategic rivalry between China and the West? Has labour’s ‘yes, but’ stance changed? Is pro-membership still hegemonic? How have social forces within Ha–vet and neo-mercantilism revisited their position in the last decade? Can they form an alternative within the context of the crisis of liberalism?

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