Analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migration

Abstract This article argues that migration has evolved into a conflictual parameter in the institutionalization of the EU-Turkey relationship and that it plays a significant role in the formation of instability as the main feature of this institutionalization process. Moreover, migration in its nat...

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Main Author: Yılmaz Kaplan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-09-01
Series:European Journal of Futures Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40309-018-0144-x
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spelling doaj-f1d909301f0d45e79bcec4d6012a52bf2020-11-25T03:54:02ZengSpringerOpenEuropean Journal of Futures Research2195-41942195-22482018-09-016111010.1186/s40309-018-0144-xAnalysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migrationYılmaz Kaplan0Erzurum Technical UniversityAbstract This article argues that migration has evolved into a conflictual parameter in the institutionalization of the EU-Turkey relationship and that it plays a significant role in the formation of instability as the main feature of this institutionalization process. Moreover, migration in its nature is a dynamic/non-linear social phenomenon which makes an institutionalization process highly open to exogenous effects and quite unstable. Therefore, contrary to the mainstream institutionalist approaches, this case study argues that an institutionalization process does not necessarily bring about continuity in the wake of an exogenous shock, but if an institutionalization process contains conflictual parameters (like the migration issue) with a strong connection with endogenous and exogenous dynamics, instability/change might become the main feature of it. From this point of view, this study anticipates that the migration-like dynamic parameters will keep the European integration as an ongoing process in the future, and its structure will be subject to a continual change. Furthermore, this change-oriented institutionalization might make the EU more heterogeneous and multi-dimensional in time. Related to this anticipation, even though the migration issue plays an inhibitor role in Turkey’s accession process to the EU at the moment, it might play a catalyst role in this process by making a differentiated membership a more reasonable option for both the EU countries and Turkey in a more differentiated EU structure in the future.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40309-018-0144-xEuropean UnionEuropean integrationTurkeyMigrationInstitutionalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yılmaz Kaplan
spellingShingle Yılmaz Kaplan
Analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migration
European Journal of Futures Research
European Union
European integration
Turkey
Migration
Institutionalism
author_facet Yılmaz Kaplan
author_sort Yılmaz Kaplan
title Analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migration
title_short Analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migration
title_full Analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migration
title_fullStr Analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migration
title_full_unstemmed Analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the EU, Turkey and the issue of migration
title_sort analysing instability as a future for an institutionalization process: the eu, turkey and the issue of migration
publisher SpringerOpen
series European Journal of Futures Research
issn 2195-4194
2195-2248
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Abstract This article argues that migration has evolved into a conflictual parameter in the institutionalization of the EU-Turkey relationship and that it plays a significant role in the formation of instability as the main feature of this institutionalization process. Moreover, migration in its nature is a dynamic/non-linear social phenomenon which makes an institutionalization process highly open to exogenous effects and quite unstable. Therefore, contrary to the mainstream institutionalist approaches, this case study argues that an institutionalization process does not necessarily bring about continuity in the wake of an exogenous shock, but if an institutionalization process contains conflictual parameters (like the migration issue) with a strong connection with endogenous and exogenous dynamics, instability/change might become the main feature of it. From this point of view, this study anticipates that the migration-like dynamic parameters will keep the European integration as an ongoing process in the future, and its structure will be subject to a continual change. Furthermore, this change-oriented institutionalization might make the EU more heterogeneous and multi-dimensional in time. Related to this anticipation, even though the migration issue plays an inhibitor role in Turkey’s accession process to the EU at the moment, it might play a catalyst role in this process by making a differentiated membership a more reasonable option for both the EU countries and Turkey in a more differentiated EU structure in the future.
topic European Union
European integration
Turkey
Migration
Institutionalism
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40309-018-0144-x
work_keys_str_mv AT yılmazkaplan analysinginstabilityasafutureforaninstitutionalizationprocesstheeuturkeyandtheissueofmigration
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