Abstract
Hamit Bozarslan analyses the Turkish 1975-1980s crisis, which was both a political crisis and an economical recession. In this context, the confrontation between left-wing and right-wing radical groups generated a civil war climate to the point that the army massively intervened in 1980. Though this crisis has long been analysed as a situation of chaos, progressively becoming independent from any control, the author insists on the actors' alliance or confrontation strategies in the deployment of violence. Violence is not the result of unpersonal and anonymous forces but results from political and social processes, which actors and interactions ought to be understood.
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