Özen, HayriyeOzen, SukruOzen, HayriyeDepartment of Public Administration and Political Science2024-07-052024-07-052009351350-50841461-732310.1177/13505084091045082-s2.0-70350259617https://doi.org/10.1177/1350508409104508https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14411/1505Özen, Sukru/0000-0003-3618-3171; Ozen, Hayriye/0000-0001-5476-176XIn this article, we argue that the emergent literature that integrates the neo-institutional and social movement theories for a better understanding of institutional change offers a partial picture concerning the roles of the state and society in institutional wars due to its preoccupation with the liberal polities prevalent in the Anglo-Saxon countries. We suggest that the macro-institutional perspective that recognizes the influences of varied polities should be introduced to this emergent literature, if it is to provide a full picture. Incorporating the macro-institutional insights into the integrative approach, we examine a struggle between a group of protesters, a multinational gold-mining company and governmental actors regarding an environmental issue in Bergama, Turkey, where a statist polity mediates worldwide currents towards the neo-liberal order. The findings indicate that the Turkish state repressed the mobilizations against the neo-liberal construction of the mining field and reinforced the existing neo-liberal logic in the mining field through introducing a new regulatory framework. On the basis of the findings, we suggest that both the trajectory and consequences of institutional wars are influenced by the kind of polity in which they take place.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessenvironmentinstitutional changelocal resistanceMNCneo-institutionalismpolitysocial movementPeasants Against MNCs and the State: The Role of the Bergama Struggle in the Institutional Construction of the Gold-Mining Field in TurkeyArticleQ3Q1164547573WOS:000268203800005