
Oguzhan Goksel
Associate Professor of Political Economy & International Relations
Managing Editor of New Middle Eastern Studies (NMES) journal
2021 - Associate Professor (ÜAK, Inter-Universities Council of Turkey)
2015 - Ph.D. in Political Science, Durham University, UK
2011 - M.A. in International Relations (Middle East), Durham University, UK
2010 - B.A. in International Relations, Istanbul University (Faculty of Political Science), Turkey
Oguzhan Goksel is Associate Professor of Political Economy & International Relations at Marmara University, Faculty of Economics, Turkey. He is also the Managing Editor of international peer-reviewed journal "New Middle Eastern Studies" based in the UK.
Prior to joining Marmara University in March 2021, he worked at Istanbul 29 Mayis University from October 2014 to February 2021.
His Ph.D. research at Durham University focused on modernisation in non-Western societies, specifically examining the case of Turkey in light of competing theories of development and in comparison to Middle Eastern countries such as Egypt and Tunisia. The thesis is titled "Assessing the Turkish Model: The Modernisation Trajectory of Turkey through the Lens of the Multiple Modernities Paradigm" (Supervisors: Professor Emma C. Murphy & Dr. Colin Turner).
Goksel's main areas of research are modernisation and non-Western modernities; comparative political economy; political economy of development; historical sociology; and foreign policy analysis. His works have been published in various edited volumes and international peer-reviewed journals such as Mediterranean Politics, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Turkish Studies, New Middle Eastern Studies and Insight Turkey.
Phone: +90 216 777 3000
Address: Marmara University, Department of Economics
Maltepe Campus, Faculty of Economics – Istanbul, Turkey
Managing Editor of New Middle Eastern Studies (NMES) journal
2021 - Associate Professor (ÜAK, Inter-Universities Council of Turkey)
2015 - Ph.D. in Political Science, Durham University, UK
2011 - M.A. in International Relations (Middle East), Durham University, UK
2010 - B.A. in International Relations, Istanbul University (Faculty of Political Science), Turkey
Oguzhan Goksel is Associate Professor of Political Economy & International Relations at Marmara University, Faculty of Economics, Turkey. He is also the Managing Editor of international peer-reviewed journal "New Middle Eastern Studies" based in the UK.
Prior to joining Marmara University in March 2021, he worked at Istanbul 29 Mayis University from October 2014 to February 2021.
His Ph.D. research at Durham University focused on modernisation in non-Western societies, specifically examining the case of Turkey in light of competing theories of development and in comparison to Middle Eastern countries such as Egypt and Tunisia. The thesis is titled "Assessing the Turkish Model: The Modernisation Trajectory of Turkey through the Lens of the Multiple Modernities Paradigm" (Supervisors: Professor Emma C. Murphy & Dr. Colin Turner).
Goksel's main areas of research are modernisation and non-Western modernities; comparative political economy; political economy of development; historical sociology; and foreign policy analysis. His works have been published in various edited volumes and international peer-reviewed journals such as Mediterranean Politics, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Turkish Studies, New Middle Eastern Studies and Insight Turkey.
Phone: +90 216 777 3000
Address: Marmara University, Department of Economics
Maltepe Campus, Faculty of Economics – Istanbul, Turkey
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Co-Authored Papers by Oguzhan Goksel
treated the Ottoman Empire as a counterbalance in its “Great Game” against Russia and its competition with France throughout the 19th century. After the proclamation of the Republic of Türkiye in 1923, Britain continued to be a bilateral partner with Türkiye during the Second World War, Ankara’s membership to NATO, relations with the Middle East, the Cyprus issue, relations with the European Union, and the United States. Almost at every turning point of this bilateral relationship, conflict and cooperation walked hand in hand and without demolishing the above-stated understanding and consideration.