This study examines the concept of democracy and the rule of law within the historical framework of Turkish constitutionalism. The primary purpose is to identify the essential indicators of democracy in Turkey by analyzing the development of parliamentary institutions and the Constitutional Court, which play a vital role in safeguarding constitutional principles. The scope of the study covers the constitutional evolution from the early 1921 Constitution, emphasizing national sovereignty, to the 1982 Constitution, which reflects a more authoritarian approach prioritizing state authority over individual rights. Methodologically, the research adopts a historical-legal analysis, focusing on how constitutional texts reflect the political and social conditions of their time. The study is limited to the constitutions of 1921, 1924, 1961, and 1982, without examining later amendments in detail. This limitation aims to highlight the foundational constitutional choices shaping Turkish democracy rather than subsequent legislative reforms. The findings suggest that while the 1961 Constitution represented the most advanced stage of constitutional democracy with its emphasis on rights, freedoms, and judicial review, both the 1921 and 1924 constitutions laid important foundations by codifying the principle of national sovereignty. The 1982 Constitution, however, marked a regression by reinforcing state power at the expense of participatory democracy and individual rights. In conclusion, the Turkish constitutional experience demonstrates that democracy and the rule of law have developed in a dialectical relationship, shaped by political ruptures, military interventions, and shifting societal demands. Each constitution reflects both progress and limitations, revealing the complex and contested nature of democratic consolidation in Turkey.
Yüksel Özdemır (Mon,) studied this question.