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The Turkish Case: The Use of Institutional Pressure Relief Valves

In: Public Preferences and Institutional Designs

Author

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  • Niva Golan-Nadir

    (The University at Albany, SUNY)

Abstract

Golan-Nadir reveals that in Turkey the disparity between public preferences and long-sustained marriage policy is rooted in the employment of institutional tactics by state institutions. As the chapter shows, the extensive use of institutional pressure relief valves is the cause of enduring gaps between public preferences and institutional designs. The chapter thoroughly discloses the development and evolution of institutional pressure relief valves—namely, inexpensive procedural arrangements to contain the social-demographic consequences involved with unofficial religious marriages. Finally, this chapter presents data from the 2016 Public Opinion Survey on Marriage Policy to demonstrate the relative familiarity of Muslim-Turks with the common practice of conducting two complementary marriage ceremonies. Such familiarity serves as an indicator for the effectiveness of this tool in preventing societal pressure towards state institutions.

Suggested Citation

  • Niva Golan-Nadir, 2022. "The Turkish Case: The Use of Institutional Pressure Relief Valves," Springer Books, in: Public Preferences and Institutional Designs, chapter 0, pages 215-247, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-030-84554-4_9
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-84554-4_9
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