1. The Cold War Effect 2. The Kosovo Effect 3. The Helsinki Effect 4. The UK Effect 5. The Cyprus Effect 6. The Arab Spring Effect 7. The Erdo?an Effect
Dr Natalie Martin is a Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at Nottingham Trent University and a Visiting Fellow at Loughborough University. A former journalist, her research interests include the Turkey-EU accession process and the theoretical questions it raises.
"This excellent work on the relationship among Turkey, the West, and the EU is most timely. ... she covers a wide range of issues, which helps make sense of current headlines about the EU and Turkey. ... The current migrant issue has opened a new chapter in the EU-Turkey drama, and Martin's work provides analysis for readers to understand the big, the immediate, and the long-term pictures. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above." (H. Steck, Choice, Vol. 53 (9), May, 2016) "This rich book traces EU-Turkey relations between the two poles of geopolitics and norms. ... The methodological choice to apply a qualitative process-tracing approach represents one of the book's added values. ... the author has fully reached her aim to 'make a case on the balance of probabilities for a given explanation' ... and is very convincing in doing so." (Funda Tekin, Journal of Common Market Studies, Vol. 54 (4), 2016)
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