The Emerging Welfare Project has resulted in groundbreaking scientific development in the fields of the welfare state, social movements, and computational social sciences. My project has resulted in a very large welfare state database (glow.ku.edu.tr) and protests events database (glocon.ku.edu.tr) as proposed in the GA. Following the release of the GLOW dataset (glow.ku.edu.tr) in 2020, which is currently the largest welfare state dataset of its kind, EMW has delivered the largest and state-of-the-art AI-based automated protest event dataset (Global Contentious Politics Dataset – GLOCON – glocon.ku.edu.tr) about the developing world. The EMW Project has successfully delivered a large number of scientific outputs beyond what was envisioned and planned in the project proposal. In the GA, I proposed to deliver the 6 journal articles. By the end of the project period, the project has produced 37 publications. In addition, 17 more articles are currently under review and in progress. My first book, which is about the politics of welfare in Turkey, is forthcoming from the University of Michigan Press and its Turkish translation from the İletişim Press. The book manuscript, which will encapsulate all the findings of the project is also in progress.
We used the GLOW database in an article published at the top social policy journal, JESP, where we show four distinct global welfare state regime clusters: institutional, neoliberal, populist and residual. (Yörük, Öker and Tafoya, 2022). This article confirmed the first hypothesis of the ERC project. EMW project has produced a series of publications that confirm the second hypothesis of the project. The project has shown that in there is a global pattern of social welfare programs being used as counter-insurgency and that this strategy is a key driving force behind the welfare state expansion in the Global South, given the escalation of protest movements and violent conflict. We show that in India, South Africa, Turkey, China, Brazil, geographically, culturally and historically distant emerging markets are converging into a new welfare state regime as a result of shared political dynamics.