Research Article

External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case

Volume: 5 Number: 2 September 23, 2025
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External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case

Abstract

This study delves into Turkey's historical trajectory of external voting by scrutinizing it through three fundamental democratic inclusion principles: the All Subjected Principle, the All Affected Principle, and the Stakeholder Principle. By exploring Turkey's evolution in external voting practices alongside these principles, this research aims to offer a comprehensive understanding of the dynamics of Turkey's engagement with its diaspora and the implications for its electoral processes. From the absence of external voting laws before 1950 to the establishment of ballot boxes abroad in 2014, Turkey's journey elucidates the intricate interplay between normative democratic principles and practical electoral regulations. Through an examination of Turkey's external voting history, this study contributes to a deeper comprehension of the boundaries of democratic inclusion and the evolving nature of political engagement beyond national borders. The findings cover Turkey's external voting alteration across four stages, each investigated through democratic inclusion principles. From the absence of legislation pre-1950 to the establishment of ballot boxes abroad in 2014, Turkey's journey reflects varying degrees of alignment with the All Subjected, All Affected, and Stakeholder Principles. The study found that Turkey has gradually extended its inclusiveness to its diaspora based on citizenship, even without the limitation of Bauböck's Stakeholder Principle.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Political Science (Other)

Journal Section

Research Article

Early Pub Date

September 17, 2025

Publication Date

September 23, 2025

Submission Date

March 5, 2025

Acceptance Date

August 29, 2025

Published in Issue

Year 2025 Volume: 5 Number: 2

APA
Çobankara, S. F. (2025). External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case. Turkish Journal of Diaspora Studies, 5(2), 178-197. https://doi.org/10.52241/tjds.1651801
AMA
1.Çobankara SF. External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case. TJDS. 2025;5(2):178-197. doi:10.52241/tjds.1651801
Chicago
Çobankara, Süleyman Furkan. 2025. “External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case”. Turkish Journal of Diaspora Studies 5 (2): 178-97. https://doi.org/10.52241/tjds.1651801.
EndNote
Çobankara SF (September 1, 2025) External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case. Turkish Journal of Diaspora Studies 5 2 178–197.
IEEE
[1]S. F. Çobankara, “External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case”, TJDS, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 178–197, Sept. 2025, doi: 10.52241/tjds.1651801.
ISNAD
Çobankara, Süleyman Furkan. “External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case”. Turkish Journal of Diaspora Studies 5/2 (September 1, 2025): 178-197. https://doi.org/10.52241/tjds.1651801.
JAMA
1.Çobankara SF. External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case. TJDS. 2025;5:178–197.
MLA
Çobankara, Süleyman Furkan. “External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case”. Turkish Journal of Diaspora Studies, vol. 5, no. 2, Sept. 2025, pp. 178-97, doi:10.52241/tjds.1651801.
Vancouver
1.Süleyman Furkan Çobankara. External Voting and the Democratic Boundary Problem: A Democratic Inclusion Analysis of the Turkish Case. TJDS. 2025 Sep. 1;5(2):178-97. doi:10.52241/tjds.1651801

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