Turkish Studies
Vol. 11, No. 4, 555–577, December 2010
ISSN 1468-3849 Print/1743-9663 Online/10/040555-23 © 2010 Taylor & Francis
DOI: 10.1080/14683849.2010.540114
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Media Values and Democratization: What
Unites and What Divides Religious-
Conservative and Pro-Secular Elites?
MURAT SOMER
Institute for International and Regional Studies, Princeton University, and Department of International
Relations, Koç University
Taylor and Francis FTUR_A_540114.sgm 10.1080/14683849.2010.540114 Turkish Studies 1468-3849 (print)/1743-9663 (online) Original Article 2010 Taylor & Francis 11 04 0000002010 MuratSomer musomer@ku.edu.tr
ABSTRACT This article presents a systematic content analysis of three religious-conserva-
tive and two pro-secular newspapers in 1996–2004 in Turkey, and discusses some findings
and their implications regarding elite values and democratization: considerable internal
pluralism within both religious-conservative and pro-secular elites; general consensus on
democracy but not on democratic norms’ application to specific issues and groups other than
one’s own; a division of values on religion, secularism, and social pluralism; Political value
change in favor of liberal democracy but social conservatism among religious-conservative
elites; fragmentation and relative cynicism, but not necessarily authoritarianism, among pro-
secular elites; weak ideational change on the Kurdish issue. The article argues that the press
plays a significant political role as a site where elite values change or are reproduced through
discussion, deliberation, or silence. Values affect and are affected by political developments.
Introduction
In 1914, Turkish journalist Ahmed Emin (Yalman) defended his dissertation titled
“The Development of Modern Turkey as Measured by Its Press” at Columbia
University. In the preface, he states that the press should be taken as a measure of
development “because it has always been the leading factor in the Modern Turkish
Movement.”
A century later observers seem to agree that the press continues to play a leading
and active role in Turkish politics. This time, the press is also widely criticized for,
among other deficits, ideological-political divisions, corruption, and weakness of
democratic values.
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However, these criticisms are rarely based in theoretically
informed and systematic empirical evidence. Often, criticisms seem to be frozen in
time. Today as much as two decades ago, Turkish journalist-intellectuals write that
basic, electoral democracy has taken root in Turkey but needs to be developed and
protected because political elites (including the media elites) lack a consensus on
pluralistic democracy.
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But, as the findings below illustrate, the Turkish press
Correspondence Address: Murat Somer, Assoc. Prof., International Relations Department, Koç University,
Istanbul, Turkey. Email: musomer@ku.edu.tr.
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