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Articles

The impacts of the Turkish government’s conspiratorial framing of the Gezi Park protests

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Pages 610-622 | Received 01 May 2016, Accepted 05 Jan 2017, Published online: 21 Apr 2017

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Read on this site (9)

Jonas Bergan Draege. (2023) Narrow Responses to Social Movements: Evidence from Turkey’s Gezi Protests. Representation 59:4, pages 745-761.
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Senem B. Çevik & Robi Friedman. (2022) Turkey’s soldier’s matrix: fighting against internal threats and external enemies. Politics, Groups, and Identities 0:0, pages 1-19.
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Alexei Anisin & Pelin Ayan Musil. (2022) Protester-police fraternization in the 2013 Gezi Park uprisings. Social Movement Studies 21:4, pages 395-412.
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Hayriye Özen. (2020) Reproducing ‘hegemony’ thereafter? The long-term political effects of the Gezi protests in Turkey. Southeast European and Black Sea Studies 20:2, pages 245-264.
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Hue Trong Duong, Hong Tien Vu & Nhung Nguyen. (2019) Activists’ Strategic Communication in an Authoritarian Setting: Integrating Social Movement Framing into Issues Management. International Journal of Strategic Communication 13:2, pages 133-151.
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Articles from other publishers (15)

Türkay Salim Nefes, Patrick Präg, Alejandro Romero-Reche & Manuel Pereira-Puga. (2023) Believing in conspiracy theories in Spain during the COVID-19 pandemic: Drivers and public health implications. Social Science & Medicine 336, pages 116263.
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Türkay Salim Nefes & Ozan Aksoy. (2023) The impact of partisanship and religiosity on conspiracy‐theory beliefs in Turkey. Sociology Compass.
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Ender AKYOL & Abdullah ATLİ. (2023) Beliefs of Turkish University Students in COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories: The Role of Fear of COVID-19 and Political OrientationTürk Üniversite Öğrencilerinin COVID-19 Komplo Teorilerine İnançları: COVID-19 Korkusu ve Politik Eğilimin Rolü. Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi Vizyoner Dergisi 14:37, pages 37-51.
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Nukhet Ahu Sandal & Ahmet Erdi Ozturk. (2022) Critical Junctures of Securitisation: The Case of the AK Party in Turkey. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 48:1, pages 38-53.
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Karen M. DouglasRobbie M. Sutton. (2023) What Are Conspiracy Theories? A Definitional Approach to Their Correlates, Consequences, and Communication. Annual Review of Psychology 74:1, pages 271-298.
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Ihsan Yilmaz & Ismail AlbayrakIhsan Yilmaz & Ismail Albayrak. 2022. Populist and Pro-Violence State Religion. Populist and Pro-Violence State Religion 209 246 .
Alparslan Nas. 2022. Journalism Pedagogy in Transitional Countries. Journalism Pedagogy in Transitional Countries 111 137 .
J. D. Moffitt, Catherine King & Kathleen M. Carley. (2021) Hunting Conspiracy Theories During the COVID-19 Pandemic. Social Media + Society 7:3, pages 205630512110432.
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Melis G. Laebens & Aykut Öztürk. (2020) Partisanship and Autocratization: Polarization, Power Asymmetry, and Partisan Social Identities in Turkey. Comparative Political Studies 54:2, pages 245-279.
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Ergin Bulut & Başak Can. (2020) Media, Affect, and Authoritarian Futures in “New Turkey:” Spectacular Confessions on Television in the Post-Coup Era. Communication, Culture and Critique 13:4, pages 403-421.
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Stavros Drakoularakos. (2020) Turkey and Erdoğan’s rising “Lausanne Syndrome”. Digest of Middle East Studies 30:1, pages 22-33.
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Marla Frederick, Yunus Doğan Telliel & Heather Mellquist Lehto. (2020) Reflections on COVID-19. Religion and Society 11:1, pages 186-204.
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Senem Aydın-Düzgit & Evren Balta. (2018) When elites polarize over polarization: Framing the polarization debate in Turkey. New Perspectives on Turkey 60, pages 153-176.
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Karen M. Douglas, Joseph E. Uscinski, Robbie M. Sutton, Aleksandra Cichocka, Turkay Nefes, Chee Siang Ang & Farzin Deravi. (2019) Understanding Conspiracy Theories. Political Psychology 40:S1, pages 3-35.
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Senem Aydın-Düzgit & Evren Balta. (2018) When elites polarize over polarization: Framing the polarization debate in Turkey – RETRACTED. New Perspectives on Turkey 59, pages 109-133.
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