This book is the first to offer a full exploration of the theory of uneven and combined development
Acknowledgements / 1. Introduction, Alexander Anievas and Kamran Matin / 2. Uneven and Combined Development: 'The International' in Theory and History, Justin Rosenberg / 3. The Conditions for the Emergence of Uneven and Combined Development, Neil Davidson / 4. The Uneven, Combined, and Intersocietal Dimensions of Korean State Formation and Consolidation over the Longue Durée: 300-1900 CE, Owen Miller / 5. Combination as 'Foreign Policy': The Inter-Societal Origins of the Ottoman Empire, Kerem Ni¿anc¿ölu / 6. Revisiting the Transformation of the 19th Century and the 'Eastern Question': Uneven and Combined Development and the Ottoman Steppe, Jamie Allinson / 7. Asian Sources of British Imperial Power: The Role of the Mysorean Rocket in the Opium War, Luke Cooper / 8. Rejecting the 'Staples' Thesis and Re-centering Migration: A Comparative Analysis of 'Late Development' in Canada and Argentina, Jessica Evans / 9. Navigating Uneven and Combined Development: Britain's Africa Policy in Historical Perspective, William Brown / 10. The Impact of the 'Global Transformation' on Uneven and Combined Development, Barry Buzan and George Lawson / 11. The Ethiopian Revolutions in World-Historical Perspective, Fouad Makki / 12. Uneven and Combined Development in the Sociocultural Evolution of World-Systems, Christopher Chase-Dunn and Marilyn Grell-Brisk / 13. Navigating non-Eurocentrism and Trotskyist Integrity in the New Trotskyist IR of World History, John M. Hobson / 14. The Stakes of Uneven and Combined Development, David L. Blaney and Naeem Inayatullah / 15. Conclusion: Rethinking Historical Sociology and World History: Beyond the Eurocentric Gaze, Alexander Anievas and Kamran Matin / Bibliography / Index / List of Contributors
Alexander Anievas is an Early Career Leverhulme Fellow at the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge where he also obtained his PhD. He has published in various journals including European Journal of International Relations, Politics, Review of International Studies, International Politics and Capital & Class. He is the author of Capital, the State, and War: Class Conflict and Geopolitics in the Thirty Years' Crisis, 1914-1945 (2014) and co-author of How the West Came to Rule: The Geopolitical Origins of Capitalism (2015). He has also edited, co-edited and contributed to Marxism and World Politics (2010), Race and Racism in International Relations ( 2014), Cataclysm 1914: The First World War and the Making of Modern World Politics (2014), and The Longue Durée of the Far Right (2014). He is a member of the editorial collective Historical Materialism: Research in Critical Marxist Theory.
Kamran Matin is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at Sussex University, a management committee member of Centre for Advanced International Theory, and a co-founder and co-director of Sussex Uneven and Combined Development Working Group. His publications on historical sociology and premodern state-formation, postcolonial theory, political Islam, and modern Iranian history have appeared in European Journal of International Relations, Journal of international Relations and Development, and Middle East Critique. He is the author of Recasting Iranian Modernity: International Relations and Social Change (2013).