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Cambridge Review of International Affairs

 

It is now twenty-five years since the theory of Uneven and Combined Development (UCD) was first introduced into IR. During that time, it has been applied to numerous subject matters – from Brexit and Trump today, through the early modern rise of the West, and all the way back to the prehistoric emergence of ‘the international’ itself. With its unique potential for integrating the significance of international relations into social theory, UCD continues to flourish and to evolve in exciting new ways.

In the second event, UCD in IR and Beyond, we will be joined by four leading scholars from outside UCD to provide commentaries on the Special Issue and to explore connections between UCD and History, Realism, Marxism and Postcolonial Theory.
 

Tuesday 25 May 2021 at 5 pm in Prague Bratislava

 

Find out more and register here>> 

 

Previous events in this series

 

Uneven and Combined Development pt. 1: New Directions in UCD

Date: 22 March 2021

Time: 18:00-19:30 (CET)

Registration: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJErcOGtrTgpGd2lkOfByuExqss28BcpptmW

 

Panel members:

Justin Rosenberg, University of Sussex

Johanna Siebert, The Greening of UCD

Joe Leigh, UCD as Cultural Theory

Luke Cooper, Science Fiction and the Politics of UCD

Felipe Antunes, UCD and Macro-Economic Policy Analysis

 

It is now twenty-five years since the theory of Uneven and Combined Development (UCD) was first introduced into IR. During that time, it has been applied to numerous subject matters – from Brexit and Trump today, through the early modern rise of the West, and all the way back to the prehistoric emergence of ‘the international’ itself. With its unique potential for integrating the significance of international relations into social theory, UCD continues to flourish, and to evolve in exciting new ways.

In March 2021, the Cambridge Review of International Affairs (CRIA) is publishing a Special Issue on ‘New Directions in Uneven and Combined Development’. Contributors apply the theory to ecology, culture, literary criticism, science fiction, macro-economic policy studies, and STS as well as to mainstream theory in IR and IPE.

To mark this new wave of UCD scholarship, CRIA is holding two online events in association with the European International Studies Association.

In the first event, New Directions in UCD, Justin Rosenberg will introduce the new wave of scholarship, and four contributors to the Special Issue will discuss how they relate UCD to such diverse issues as ecology, cultural theory, science fiction as political theory, and macroeconomic policy analysis. In the second event, planned for late May 2021, (details to be announced), we will be joined by leading scholars from outside UCD to provide commentaries on the Special Issue and to explore connections between UCD and other approaches in IR and beyond.

 

Find out more>> 

Date: 
Tuesday, 25 May, 2021 - 17:00 to 19:00

Welcome to the Cambridge Review of International Affairs

 

The Cambridge Review of International Affairs publishes original scholarship on international affairs.

 

It is committed to publishing diverse approaches, methods and areas of analysis, and encourages the submission of interdisciplinary work from academics and policymakers.