Sunday, June 2, 2013

Cemal Burak Tansel — The Gezi Park occupation: confronting authoritarian neoliberalism

On May 28 an impromptu occupation began in Istanbul’s central Gezi Park following the news that the metropolitan municipality had sent bulldozers to demolish the park. The park was doomed as it sits on the pathway of a new urban restructuring programme which included the transformation of the green zone into another superfluous shopping complex.
Largely ignored by the outlets of the corporate press, the news travelled quickly on social media, followed by the appearance of a number of protesters at the scene. Four days since the initial mobilisation, Gezi Park has witnessed a continuous influx of protestors who have organised sit-ins and public talks in a largely carnivalesque atmosphere. On May 30, Al Jazeera reported that ‘unconfirmed reports suggest more than 10,000 people are currently gathered in Taksim’s Gezi Park’. But the increasing number of bodies gathered at the location could not make a dent in the AKP government’s commitment to ‘urban renewal’. On the contrary, the government responded to this unexpected public resistance by repeating a time-honoured act of histrionics in Turkish politics: ignore the public, if that does not work, terrorise them....
...the meteoric rise of the occupation and the subsequent public outrage against the government signifies discontent with a broader trend that underpins the AKP’s reign since 2002: authoritarian neoliberalism. 
Open Democracy
The Gezi Park occupation: confronting authoritarian neoliberalism
Cemal Burak Tansel | PhD candidate in the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Nottingham and a fellow of the Centre for the Study of Social and Global Justice (CSSGJ). His research focuses on the international historical sociology of state formation and capitalist development in the peripheries with particular reference to Turkey.




Pretty much the same as Zucotti, Oakland, etc.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well, it's possible. But the Erdogan administration has a lot of international enemies because it is a democratically elected moderately Islamist government that has attempted to chart a separate path between the despotisms of the region and the US-Europe-Israel axis. A lot of folks would be more than happy to see Turkey turn off the democracy and go back to the old Kemalist junta of Ataturk and its enforced, anti-democratic, pro-western secularism and "liberalism".

I'm not about to jump into the useful idiot wagon just yet on behalf of another ostensible "revolution" with some made-in-the-West color-coding.

Every street rebellion in history has declared the government to be "authoritarians", "fascists", "totalitarians" or whatnot.

Matt Franko said...

Good points Dan...

I'm not sure "authoritarian neoliberalism" is the best way to put it... I think it is just 'neoliberalism'...

I'm not libertarian, but I can see how these folks would get pissed about losing some more probably scarce public park land to more BS shopping stores...

Why can't 'the authority' stand up for the renovation of the park for instance?

iow if the park is 'run down' why not renovate the park rather than get rid of it? Maintain/upgrade the park?

I'm sure the surrounding existing businesses would appreciate it and this would probably lead to revitalization of the whole area...

rsp,