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Between 'Greatness' and 'Ignorance'
Author(s) -
Sezin Topçu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
anthropology of the middle east
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.129
H-Index - 5
eISSN - 1746-0727
pISSN - 1746-0719
DOI - 10.3167/ame.2019.140202
Subject(s) - authoritarianism , politics , greatness , context (archaeology) , ignorance , political science , reflexivity , turkish , political economy , nuclear power , power (physics) , sociology , development economics , history , social science , law , democracy , economics , archaeology , social psychology , psychology , linguistics , philosophy , ecology , physics , quantum mechanics , biology
Focusing on Turkey’s nuclearisation process, which has accelerated over the past decade, this article examines the historical and contemporary relationships that the country’s political decision-makers maintain with risk, the environment and health and ecological disasters. While the transition to nuclear power in the post-Fukushima period is not a dynamic specific to Turkey, it nevertheless operates, in the Turkish case, in a particular geographic, energy and political context. On the one hand, Turkey is a highly seismic country that heavily depends on its neighbours for energy and, on the other, is experiencing a creeping political authoritarianism. This article focuses on the dynamics and specificities of this post-disaster nuclear transition, which will be analysed here as ‘serene nuclearism’, positioned as the polar opposite of ‘reflexive modernisation’, as theorised by Ulrich Beck.

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