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Panel
YOUTH AND POLITICS
MURCIR panel on “Youth and Politics” was held on January 13,
2010 at Marmara University Göztepe Campus, İbrahim Üzümcü
Conference Hall. Prof. Dr. Büşra Ersanlı from Marmara
University Department of Political Science and International
Relations chaired the panel.
The first panelist was Yörük Kurtaran, Director of the Youth
Studies Unit at Bilgi University. In his speech, Kurtaran
mainly focused on the definition(s) of the youth. Kurtaran
asserted that age could not be accepted as the sole criteria
to define the youth and mentioned different youth groups in
the society. He pointed out various perspectives in the
society considering the definition of the youth. He also
shared his experiences with some youth groups at the workshops
or projects of the Youth Studies Unit.
Following Kurtaran, Assoc. Prof. Yüksel Taşkın from Marmara
University Department of Political Science and International
Relations took the floor. Taşkın based his views and
observations on two researches conducted to analyze the
political tendencies of Turkish youth, one being a
quantitative survey in 2007 while the other was a qualitative
survey in 2009. Taşkın began his speech by saying that in
Turkey the values endorsed by the youth do not significantly
differ from the values of their families. He shared some
figures from 2007 research and supported these figures with
the findings of the qualitative survey. Taşkın mostly
mentioned his observations on the youth of the political
parties.

Third speaker was a senior student from Marmara University
Department of Political Science and International Relations,
Emrah Çınar. In his speech, Çınar expressed his views on the
political scene in Turkey. He emphasized the need for a
“democratic public” and complained that the private is
extending into the public realm and confining the public to a
narrower space. He exemplified his views by giving his
experiences from the daily life.
The last speaker was another senior student from the same
department, Ulaş Mert Olkun. Olkun conveyed his views on the
politics in Turkey through criticizing “core-periphery”
analysis of Turkish politics. While he was not rejecting the
core-periphery approach, he pointed out a need to redefine the
core and the periphery in Turkey. Contrary to the tendency to
define conservative political elite in Turkey as the
periphery, Olkun said the discriminated sections of the
society should be deemed as the real periphery.
The panel ended with comments and questions of the audience.
Panel Programme  |
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