不均衡综合发展理论与叙利亚、利比亚的社会政治转型

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES
Faruk Yalvaç, Hikmet Mengütürk
{"title":"不均衡综合发展理论与叙利亚、利比亚的社会政治转型","authors":"Faruk Yalvaç, Hikmet Mengütürk","doi":"10.1080/19436149.2023.2271761","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract:This article explores the constitutive impact of the ‘international’ on the sociopolitical transformations in Syria and Libya through the lens of the theory of Uneven and Combined Development (UCD). The conventional and numerous critical analyses of Syrian and Libyan sociopolitical change suffer from a Eurocentric and stagist understanding of development. This paper argues that development problems can be better conceptualized with an interactive framework made possible by the UCD theory. In this context, we focus on how the expansion and consolidation of capitalism through the dynamics of UCD have concretely shaped the process of sociopolitical transformation in Syria and Libya to shed light on how the international and the local have articulated to produce the socioeconomic and political outcomes in these two states. We conclude by arguing that the theory of UCD provides an alternative conceptualization in explaining the specific development trajectories in both countries.Key Words: DevelopmentLibyaSyriaTrotskyUneven and Combined Development AcknowledgementThe authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers and editors of the journal for their valuable feedback and constructive comments on an earlier version of this article.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1 See Justin Rosenberg (Citation2006) Why Is There No International Historical Sociology?,European Journal of International Relations, 12(3), pp. 307–40; (2010) Basic Problems in the Theory of Uneven and Combined Development. Part II: Unevenness and Political Multiplicity, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 23(1), pp. 165–189; (2013) The “Philosophical Premises” of Uneven and Combined Development, Review of International Studies, 39(3), pp. 1–29; (2020); Results and Prospects: An Introduction to the CRIA Special Issue on UCD, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 34(2), pp. 146–63; (2022) Debating Uneven and Combined Development/Debating International Relations: A Forum, Millennium, 50(2), pp. 1–37.See also, Alex Callinicos & Justin Rosenberg (2008) Uneven and Combined Development: The Social-Relational Substratum of 'the International'?:An Exchange of Letters, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 21(1), pp. 77–112; Jamie Allinson & Alexander Anievas (2009) The Uses and Misuses of Uneven and Combined Development: An Anatomy of a Concept, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 22(1), pp. 47–67; Alexander Anievas & Kerem Nişancıoğlu (2015) How the West Came to Rule: The Geopolitical Origins of Capitalism (London: Pluto Press); Sam Ashman (Citation2010) Capitalism, Uneven and Combined Development, and the Transhistoric, in Mark Rupert & Hazel Smith (eds) Historical Materialism and Globalization, pp. 183–96 (London: Routledge); Neil Davidson (Citation2009) Putting the Nation Back into ‘the International', Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 22(1), pp. 9–28; Davidson (Citation2018) The Frontiers of Uneven and Combined Development, Historical Materialism, 26(3), pp. 52–78; Ray Kiely (Citation2012) Spatial Hierarchy And/Or Contemporary Geopolitics: What Can And Can’t Uneven And Combined Development Explain?, Cambridge Review Of International Affairs, 25(2), pp. 231–48; John M. Hobson (Citation2011) What’s at Stake in the Neo-Trotskyist Debate? Towards a Non-Eurocentric Historical Sociology of Uneven and Combined Development, Millennium, 40(1), pp. 147–66.2 Fouad Makki (Citation2015) Reframing Development Theory: The Significance of the Idea of Uneven and Combined Development, Theory and Society, 44(5), pp. 471–97.3 Anievas & Nişancioğlu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 93.4 Rosenberg, Why Is There No International, pp. 310–313.5 See Jamie Allinson (Citation2020) The Middle East and North Africa in the Lens of Marxist International Relations Theory in: RaymondHinnebusch & Jasmine K. Gani (eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System; pp. 211–224 (London: Routledge).6 See Kamran Matin (Citation2018) Lineages of the Islamic State: An International Historical Sociology of State (De-)Formation in Iraq, Journal of Historical Sociology, 31, pp. 6–24; Matin (Citation2013), Recasting Iranian Modernity: International Relations and Social Change (London: Routledge); Felipe Antunes de Oliveira (Citation2019) The Rise of the Latin American Far-Right Explained: Dependency Theory Meets Uneven and Combined Development, Globalizations, 16(7), pp. 1145–64; de Oliveira (Citation2020) Of Economic Whips and Political Necessities: A Contribution to the International Political Economy of Uneven and Combined Development, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 34(2), pp. 267–95.7 Gilbert Achcar (Citation2013) People Want: A Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising (London: University of California Press), p. 78; Adam Hanieh (Citation2013), Lineages of Revolt: Issues of Contemporary Capitalism in the Middle East (London: Haymarket Books), p. 17.8 See Matteo Capasso (Citation2020) The War and the Economy: The Gradual Destruction of Libya, Review of African Political Economy, 47(166), pp. 545–67; Capasso (Citation2021) IR, imperialism, and the Global South: From Libya to Venezuela, Politics, 0(0), pp. 1–16. 9 Ussama Makdisi (2017) The Mythology of the Sectarian Middle East. Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, February 13. Available at: https://www.bakerinstitute.org/research/mythology-sectarian-middle-east, accessed August 15, 2023.10 Felipe Antunes de Oliveira (Citation2020) Development for Whom? Beyond the developed/underdeveloped Dichotomy, Journal of International Relations and Development, 23, p. 925.11 Makki, Reframing Development, p. 492.12 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, pp. 925–926.13 Ibid. p. 940.14 Ibid, p. 936.15 Matin, Recasting Iranian Modernity, p. 16.16 Leon Trotsky (Citation2008) The History of the Russian Revolution (Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books).17 The classical example is Walt WhitmanRostow’s (1960) The Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist Manifesto (London: Cambridge University Press). Also see Samuel Philips Huntington (Citation1971) The Change to Change: Modernization, Development, and Politics, Comparative Politics 3(3), pp. 283–322.18 Anievas & Nişancıoğlu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 44.19 Rosenberg, Why Is There No International, p. 310.20 Allinson, The Middle East and North Africa, p. 211.21 Nazih N. Ayubi (Citation2009) Over-Stating the Arab State: Politics and Society in the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris); Simon Bromley (Citation1994) Rethinking Middle East Politics, (Austin: University of Texas).22 Immanuel Wallerstein (Citation1974) The Modern World-System, V.1: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in the Sixteenth Century (New York: Academic Press); Fernando Henrique & Enzo Faletto (1979) Dependency and Development in Latin America (Oakland: University of California Press).23 Isam al-Khafaji (Citation2004) Tormented Births: Passages to Modernity in Europe and the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris), p. 9.24 Allinson, The Middle East and North Africa, p. 211.25 Ibid, p.218.26 Michael Burawoy (Citation1989) Two Methods in Search of Science: Skocpol versus Trotsky, Theory and Society, 18 (6), pp. 759–805.27 Trotsky, The History of the Russian Revolution, p. 5.28 Ibid, p. 429 Ibid, pp. 6–12.30 See Rosenberg, Basic Problems; Rosenberg, The “Philosophical Premises”; Rosenberg, Uneven and Combined Development; Rosenberg, Results and Prospects.31 Justin Rosenberg & Chris Boyle (2019) Understanding 2016: China, Brexit and Trump in the history of uneven and combined development, Journal of Historical Sociology, 32, pp. e52–e53.32 Ashman, Capitalism, Uneven and Combined Development; Davidson, Putting the Nation Back.33 Matin, Recasting Iranian Modernity; Rosenberg, Why Is There No International; Rosenberg, Basic Problems; Rosenberg, The “Philosophical Premises.”34 Allinson & Anievas, The Uses and Misuses.35 Davidson, Putting the nation back.36 Anievas & Nisancıoğlulu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 55.37 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, p. 936.38 Rosenberg et al., Debating Uneven and Combined Development, p. 5.39 Ali A. Ahmida (Citation2008) From Tribe to Class: The Origins and the Politics of the Resistance in Colonial Libya, Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell’Istituto italiano per l'Africa e l’Oriente, 63(2), p. 298.40 Adham Saoli (Citation2020) States and state-building in the Middle East, in Raymond Hinnebusch & Jasmin K. Gani (eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System, pp. 40–50 (London: Routledge); Bromley, Rethinking Middle East, p.61; Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2003) The International Politics Of The Middle East (Manchester: Manchester University Press), p. 15.41 Ahmida, From Tribe to Class, p. 299.42 Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2020) Historical context of state formation in the Middle East: structure and agency, in Raymond Hinnebusch & Jasmin K. Gani(eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System, pp. 21–39 (London: Routledge), p. 25.43 Ibid, p.25.44 Ali Kadri (Citation2016) The Unmaking Of Arab Socialism (London: Anthem Press), p. 55.45 Trotsky, The History of the Russian Revolution, p. 5.46 Ibid, p. 5.47 Leon Trotsky (Citation1962) The Permanent Revolution and Results and Prospects (London: Labor), p.31.48 Leon Trotsky (1973 [1908]) 1905 (Harmondsworth: Penguin), p.67, as quoted in Rosenberg & Boyle, Understanding 201, p. e37.49 Hinnebusch, Historical context of state formation in the Middle East, p. 25.50 Ali A. Ahmida (Citation2012) Libya, Social Origins of Dictatorship, and the Challenge for Democracy, The Journal of the Middle East and Africa, 3(1), p. 73.51 Larbi Sadiki (Citation2011) Libya: Filling the void of a stateless state, Al Jazeera, 27 April 2011.52 Anievas & Nişancıoğlulu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 62.53 See Ayubi, Over-Stating the Arab State.54 Ibid, pp. 26–27.55 Hanieh, Lineages of Revolt, pp. 13–14, 174.56 See, for example, Henri Barkey (Citation1992) Political Economy of Stabilization Measures in the Middle East (New York: St. Martin’s Press); Eva Bellin (Citation2004) The Robustness of Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Exceptionalism in Comparative Perspective, Comparative Politics 36(2), pp. 139–157.57 Neil Davidson (n.Citationd.) Uneven and Combined Development: Modernity, Modernism, Revolution. Available online at: https://core.ac.uk/download/ pdf/296196763.pdf, accessed August 15, 2023.58 Ibid.59 See Fanar Haddad (Citation2020) Understanding ‘Sectarianism’: Sunni-Shi’a Relations in the Modern Arab World (London: Hurst).60 Ayubi, Over-Stating the Arab State, pp. 196–203.61 Linda Matar (Citation2016) The Political Economy Of Investment In Syria (New York: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 65–90; Capasso, The War and the Economy, pp. 552–553.62 See Salam Said (Citation2018) The Uprising and the Economic Interests of the Syrian Military-mercantile Complex; in R. Hinnebusch & O. Imady (eds) The Syrian Uprising: Domestic Origins and Early Trajectory (London: Routledge), pp. 56–76.63 Kadri, The Unmaking Of Arab Socialism, pp. 58–68.64 See Matar, The Political Economy Of Investment In Syria, 6; Capasso, The War and the Economy, pp. 555–558.65 Angela Joya (Citation2007) Syria’s Transition, 1970–2005: From Centralization of the State to Market Economy, in: P. Zarembka (ed.) Transitions in Latin America and in Poland and Syria (London: Emerald Group Publishing Limited), pp. 183–189.66 Hanna Batatu (Citation1981) Some Observations on the Social Roots of Syria's Ruling, Military Group and the Causes for Its Dominance, Middle East Journal, 35(3), p. 340.67 Matteo Capasso (n.Citationd.) Wars, Capital and the MENA region. Available online at: https://pomeps.org/wars-capital-and-the-mena-region, accessed August 15, 2023; Capasso, IR, Imperialism, and the Global South.68 Benjamin Selwyn (Citation2011) Trotsky, Gerschenkron and the political economy of late capitalist development, Economy and Society, 40(3), p. 432.69 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, p. 924.70 See Matteo Capasso (Citation2023) The perils of capitalist modernity for the Global South: the case of Libya, Review of International Political Economy, 30(2), pp. 632–653 on how ‘new every day imaginaries’ created by combining capitalism with local cultural structures put ‘limits to mobilising for political change.’","PeriodicalId":44822,"journal":{"name":"Middle East Critique","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Theory of Uneven and Combined Development and the Sociopolitical Transformations in Syria and Libya\",\"authors\":\"Faruk Yalvaç, Hikmet Mengütürk\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/19436149.2023.2271761\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Abstract:This article explores the constitutive impact of the ‘international’ on the sociopolitical transformations in Syria and Libya through the lens of the theory of Uneven and Combined Development (UCD). The conventional and numerous critical analyses of Syrian and Libyan sociopolitical change suffer from a Eurocentric and stagist understanding of development. This paper argues that development problems can be better conceptualized with an interactive framework made possible by the UCD theory. In this context, we focus on how the expansion and consolidation of capitalism through the dynamics of UCD have concretely shaped the process of sociopolitical transformation in Syria and Libya to shed light on how the international and the local have articulated to produce the socioeconomic and political outcomes in these two states. We conclude by arguing that the theory of UCD provides an alternative conceptualization in explaining the specific development trajectories in both countries.Key Words: DevelopmentLibyaSyriaTrotskyUneven and Combined Development AcknowledgementThe authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers and editors of the journal for their valuable feedback and constructive comments on an earlier version of this article.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1 See Justin Rosenberg (Citation2006) Why Is There No International Historical Sociology?,European Journal of International Relations, 12(3), pp. 307–40; (2010) Basic Problems in the Theory of Uneven and Combined Development. Part II: Unevenness and Political Multiplicity, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 23(1), pp. 165–189; (2013) The “Philosophical Premises” of Uneven and Combined Development, Review of International Studies, 39(3), pp. 1–29; (2020); Results and Prospects: An Introduction to the CRIA Special Issue on UCD, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 34(2), pp. 146–63; (2022) Debating Uneven and Combined Development/Debating International Relations: A Forum, Millennium, 50(2), pp. 1–37.See also, Alex Callinicos & Justin Rosenberg (2008) Uneven and Combined Development: The Social-Relational Substratum of 'the International'?:An Exchange of Letters, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 21(1), pp. 77–112; Jamie Allinson & Alexander Anievas (2009) The Uses and Misuses of Uneven and Combined Development: An Anatomy of a Concept, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 22(1), pp. 47–67; Alexander Anievas & Kerem Nişancıoğlu (2015) How the West Came to Rule: The Geopolitical Origins of Capitalism (London: Pluto Press); Sam Ashman (Citation2010) Capitalism, Uneven and Combined Development, and the Transhistoric, in Mark Rupert & Hazel Smith (eds) Historical Materialism and Globalization, pp. 183–96 (London: Routledge); Neil Davidson (Citation2009) Putting the Nation Back into ‘the International', Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 22(1), pp. 9–28; Davidson (Citation2018) The Frontiers of Uneven and Combined Development, Historical Materialism, 26(3), pp. 52–78; Ray Kiely (Citation2012) Spatial Hierarchy And/Or Contemporary Geopolitics: What Can And Can’t Uneven And Combined Development Explain?, Cambridge Review Of International Affairs, 25(2), pp. 231–48; John M. Hobson (Citation2011) What’s at Stake in the Neo-Trotskyist Debate? Towards a Non-Eurocentric Historical Sociology of Uneven and Combined Development, Millennium, 40(1), pp. 147–66.2 Fouad Makki (Citation2015) Reframing Development Theory: The Significance of the Idea of Uneven and Combined Development, Theory and Society, 44(5), pp. 471–97.3 Anievas & Nişancioğlu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 93.4 Rosenberg, Why Is There No International, pp. 310–313.5 See Jamie Allinson (Citation2020) The Middle East and North Africa in the Lens of Marxist International Relations Theory in: RaymondHinnebusch & Jasmine K. Gani (eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System; pp. 211–224 (London: Routledge).6 See Kamran Matin (Citation2018) Lineages of the Islamic State: An International Historical Sociology of State (De-)Formation in Iraq, Journal of Historical Sociology, 31, pp. 6–24; Matin (Citation2013), Recasting Iranian Modernity: International Relations and Social Change (London: Routledge); Felipe Antunes de Oliveira (Citation2019) The Rise of the Latin American Far-Right Explained: Dependency Theory Meets Uneven and Combined Development, Globalizations, 16(7), pp. 1145–64; de Oliveira (Citation2020) Of Economic Whips and Political Necessities: A Contribution to the International Political Economy of Uneven and Combined Development, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 34(2), pp. 267–95.7 Gilbert Achcar (Citation2013) People Want: A Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising (London: University of California Press), p. 78; Adam Hanieh (Citation2013), Lineages of Revolt: Issues of Contemporary Capitalism in the Middle East (London: Haymarket Books), p. 17.8 See Matteo Capasso (Citation2020) The War and the Economy: The Gradual Destruction of Libya, Review of African Political Economy, 47(166), pp. 545–67; Capasso (Citation2021) IR, imperialism, and the Global South: From Libya to Venezuela, Politics, 0(0), pp. 1–16. 9 Ussama Makdisi (2017) The Mythology of the Sectarian Middle East. Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, February 13. Available at: https://www.bakerinstitute.org/research/mythology-sectarian-middle-east, accessed August 15, 2023.10 Felipe Antunes de Oliveira (Citation2020) Development for Whom? Beyond the developed/underdeveloped Dichotomy, Journal of International Relations and Development, 23, p. 925.11 Makki, Reframing Development, p. 492.12 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, pp. 925–926.13 Ibid. p. 940.14 Ibid, p. 936.15 Matin, Recasting Iranian Modernity, p. 16.16 Leon Trotsky (Citation2008) The History of the Russian Revolution (Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books).17 The classical example is Walt WhitmanRostow’s (1960) The Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist Manifesto (London: Cambridge University Press). Also see Samuel Philips Huntington (Citation1971) The Change to Change: Modernization, Development, and Politics, Comparative Politics 3(3), pp. 283–322.18 Anievas & Nişancıoğlu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 44.19 Rosenberg, Why Is There No International, p. 310.20 Allinson, The Middle East and North Africa, p. 211.21 Nazih N. Ayubi (Citation2009) Over-Stating the Arab State: Politics and Society in the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris); Simon Bromley (Citation1994) Rethinking Middle East Politics, (Austin: University of Texas).22 Immanuel Wallerstein (Citation1974) The Modern World-System, V.1: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in the Sixteenth Century (New York: Academic Press); Fernando Henrique & Enzo Faletto (1979) Dependency and Development in Latin America (Oakland: University of California Press).23 Isam al-Khafaji (Citation2004) Tormented Births: Passages to Modernity in Europe and the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris), p. 9.24 Allinson, The Middle East and North Africa, p. 211.25 Ibid, p.218.26 Michael Burawoy (Citation1989) Two Methods in Search of Science: Skocpol versus Trotsky, Theory and Society, 18 (6), pp. 759–805.27 Trotsky, The History of the Russian Revolution, p. 5.28 Ibid, p. 429 Ibid, pp. 6–12.30 See Rosenberg, Basic Problems; Rosenberg, The “Philosophical Premises”; Rosenberg, Uneven and Combined Development; Rosenberg, Results and Prospects.31 Justin Rosenberg & Chris Boyle (2019) Understanding 2016: China, Brexit and Trump in the history of uneven and combined development, Journal of Historical Sociology, 32, pp. e52–e53.32 Ashman, Capitalism, Uneven and Combined Development; Davidson, Putting the Nation Back.33 Matin, Recasting Iranian Modernity; Rosenberg, Why Is There No International; Rosenberg, Basic Problems; Rosenberg, The “Philosophical Premises.”34 Allinson & Anievas, The Uses and Misuses.35 Davidson, Putting the nation back.36 Anievas & Nisancıoğlulu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 55.37 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, p. 936.38 Rosenberg et al., Debating Uneven and Combined Development, p. 5.39 Ali A. Ahmida (Citation2008) From Tribe to Class: The Origins and the Politics of the Resistance in Colonial Libya, Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell’Istituto italiano per l'Africa e l’Oriente, 63(2), p. 298.40 Adham Saoli (Citation2020) States and state-building in the Middle East, in Raymond Hinnebusch & Jasmin K. Gani (eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System, pp. 40–50 (London: Routledge); Bromley, Rethinking Middle East, p.61; Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2003) The International Politics Of The Middle East (Manchester: Manchester University Press), p. 15.41 Ahmida, From Tribe to Class, p. 299.42 Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2020) Historical context of state formation in the Middle East: structure and agency, in Raymond Hinnebusch & Jasmin K. Gani(eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System, pp. 21–39 (London: Routledge), p. 25.43 Ibid, p.25.44 Ali Kadri (Citation2016) The Unmaking Of Arab Socialism (London: Anthem Press), p. 55.45 Trotsky, The History of the Russian Revolution, p. 5.46 Ibid, p. 5.47 Leon Trotsky (Citation1962) The Permanent Revolution and Results and Prospects (London: Labor), p.31.48 Leon Trotsky (1973 [1908]) 1905 (Harmondsworth: Penguin), p.67, as quoted in Rosenberg & Boyle, Understanding 201, p. e37.49 Hinnebusch, Historical context of state formation in the Middle East, p. 25.50 Ali A. Ahmida (Citation2012) Libya, Social Origins of Dictatorship, and the Challenge for Democracy, The Journal of the Middle East and Africa, 3(1), p. 73.51 Larbi Sadiki (Citation2011) Libya: Filling the void of a stateless state, Al Jazeera, 27 April 2011.52 Anievas & Nişancıoğlulu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 62.53 See Ayubi, Over-Stating the Arab State.54 Ibid, pp. 26–27.55 Hanieh, Lineages of Revolt, pp. 13–14, 174.56 See, for example, Henri Barkey (Citation1992) Political Economy of Stabilization Measures in the Middle East (New York: St. Martin’s Press); Eva Bellin (Citation2004) The Robustness of Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Exceptionalism in Comparative Perspective, Comparative Politics 36(2), pp. 139–157.57 Neil Davidson (n.Citationd.) Uneven and Combined Development: Modernity, Modernism, Revolution. Available online at: https://core.ac.uk/download/ pdf/296196763.pdf, accessed August 15, 2023.58 Ibid.59 See Fanar Haddad (Citation2020) Understanding ‘Sectarianism’: Sunni-Shi’a Relations in the Modern Arab World (London: Hurst).60 Ayubi, Over-Stating the Arab State, pp. 196–203.61 Linda Matar (Citation2016) The Political Economy Of Investment In Syria (New York: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 65–90; Capasso, The War and the Economy, pp. 552–553.62 See Salam Said (Citation2018) The Uprising and the Economic Interests of the Syrian Military-mercantile Complex; in R. Hinnebusch & O. Imady (eds) The Syrian Uprising: Domestic Origins and Early Trajectory (London: Routledge), pp. 56–76.63 Kadri, The Unmaking Of Arab Socialism, pp. 58–68.64 See Matar, The Political Economy Of Investment In Syria, 6; Capasso, The War and the Economy, pp. 555–558.65 Angela Joya (Citation2007) Syria’s Transition, 1970–2005: From Centralization of the State to Market Economy, in: P. Zarembka (ed.) Transitions in Latin America and in Poland and Syria (London: Emerald Group Publishing Limited), pp. 183–189.66 Hanna Batatu (Citation1981) Some Observations on the Social Roots of Syria's Ruling, Military Group and the Causes for Its Dominance, Middle East Journal, 35(3), p. 340.67 Matteo Capasso (n.Citationd.) Wars, Capital and the MENA region. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

8见Matteo Capasso (Citation2020):《战争与经济:利比亚的逐渐毁灭》,《非洲政治经济评论》,47(166),第545-67页;国际关系、帝国主义和全球南方:从利比亚到委内瑞拉,《政治》第0期,第1-16页。乌萨马·马克迪西(2017):《宗派中东的神话》。赖斯大学贝克公共政策研究所,2月13日。可访问网址:https://www.bakerinstitute.org/research/mythology-sectarian-middle-east,于2023.8月15日访问。费利佩·安图内斯·德·奥利维拉(Citation2020):为谁发展?《超越发达/不发达的两分法》,《国际关系与发展杂志》,第23期,第925.11页。17 .马丁:《重新塑造伊朗的现代性》,第16.16页。列昂·托洛茨基(Citation2008)《俄国革命史》(芝加哥,伊利诺斯州:Haymarket Books)典型的例子是沃尔特·惠特曼·罗斯托(1960)的《经济增长的阶段:非共产主义宣言》(伦敦:剑桥大学出版社)。另见塞缪尔·菲利普斯·亨廷顿(Citation1971)《变革的变革:现代化、发展和政治》,《比较政治》第3期,第282 - 322.18 .阿尼瓦斯和Nişancıoğlu,《西方是如何统治的》,第44.19页。罗森伯格,《为什么没有国际》,第310.20页。艾林森,《中东和北非》,第211.21页。Nazih N. Ayubi (Citation2009)《夸大阿拉伯国家:中东的政治和社会》(伦敦:I.B. Tauris);西蒙·布罗姆利(引文1994)《重新思考中东政治》(奥斯汀:德克萨斯大学).22伊曼纽尔·沃勒斯坦(引文1974)现代世界体系,V.1:资本主义农业和16世纪欧洲世界经济的起源(纽约:学术出版社);费尔南多·恩里克和恩佐·法莱托(1979)拉丁美洲的依赖与发展(奥克兰:加州大学出版社).23Isam al-Khafaji (Citation2004):《痛苦的出生:通往欧洲和中东现代性的通道》(伦敦:I.B. Tauris),第9.24页。Allinson,《中东和北非》,第211.25同上,第218.26页。Michael Burawoy (Citation1989):《寻找科学的两种方法:斯科波尔与托洛茨基》,《理论与社会》,18(6),第759-805.27页。托洛茨基,《俄国革命史》,第5.28同上,第429同上,第6 - 12.30页,见Rosenberg,《基本问题》;罗森博格:《哲学前提》;罗森伯格:《不均衡与综合发展》;31 Justin Rosenberg & Chris Boyle (2019) Understanding 2016:中国、英国脱欧和特朗普在不平衡与综合发展的历史,历史社会学杂志,32,pp. e52-e53.32。戴维森:《让国家回归》,《重塑伊朗的现代性》第33期;罗森伯格:《为什么没有国际》;罗森博格:《基本问题》;罗森博格,《哲学前提》34 Allinson & Anievas:《使用与误用》。35 Davidson:《让国家回归》。36Anievas & Nisancıoğlulu,西方是如何统治的,第55.37页,Oliveira,为谁发展?Ali A. Ahmida (Citation2008):从部落到阶级:非洲殖民地利比亚抵抗运动的起源和政治;Adham Saoli (Citation2020)中东的国家和国家建设,见Raymond Hinnebusch和Jasmin K. Gani(编)《中东和北非国家和国家体系劳特利奇手册》,第40-50页(伦敦:劳特利奇出版社);布罗姆利:《重新思考中东》,第61页;Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2003)中东的国际政治(曼彻斯特:曼彻斯特大学出版社),第15.41页Ahmida,从部落到阶级,第299.42页Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2020)中东国家形成的历史背景:结构和机构,在Raymond Hinnebusch和Jasmin K. Gani(编辑)劳特利奇手册中东和北非国家和国家系统,第21-39页(伦敦:Ali Kadri (Citation2016)阿拉伯社会主义的毁灭(伦敦:Anthem出版社),第55.45页托洛茨基,俄国革命的历史,第5.46页同上,第5.47页托洛茨基(Citation1962)不断革命及其结果和前景(伦敦:劳工),第31.48页托洛茨基(1973 [1908])1905 (Harmondsworth:欣尼布希,中东国家形成的历史背景,25.50 Ali a . Ahmida (Citation2012)利比亚,独裁的社会起源和对民主的挑战,中东和非洲杂志,3(1),73.51 Larbi Sadiki (Citation2011)利比亚:填补无国家国家的空白,半岛电视台,2011年4月27日。52 Anievas和Nişancıoğlulu,西方如何来统治,第62页。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Theory of Uneven and Combined Development and the Sociopolitical Transformations in Syria and Libya
Abstract:This article explores the constitutive impact of the ‘international’ on the sociopolitical transformations in Syria and Libya through the lens of the theory of Uneven and Combined Development (UCD). The conventional and numerous critical analyses of Syrian and Libyan sociopolitical change suffer from a Eurocentric and stagist understanding of development. This paper argues that development problems can be better conceptualized with an interactive framework made possible by the UCD theory. In this context, we focus on how the expansion and consolidation of capitalism through the dynamics of UCD have concretely shaped the process of sociopolitical transformation in Syria and Libya to shed light on how the international and the local have articulated to produce the socioeconomic and political outcomes in these two states. We conclude by arguing that the theory of UCD provides an alternative conceptualization in explaining the specific development trajectories in both countries.Key Words: DevelopmentLibyaSyriaTrotskyUneven and Combined Development AcknowledgementThe authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewers and editors of the journal for their valuable feedback and constructive comments on an earlier version of this article.Disclosure StatementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1 See Justin Rosenberg (Citation2006) Why Is There No International Historical Sociology?,European Journal of International Relations, 12(3), pp. 307–40; (2010) Basic Problems in the Theory of Uneven and Combined Development. Part II: Unevenness and Political Multiplicity, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 23(1), pp. 165–189; (2013) The “Philosophical Premises” of Uneven and Combined Development, Review of International Studies, 39(3), pp. 1–29; (2020); Results and Prospects: An Introduction to the CRIA Special Issue on UCD, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 34(2), pp. 146–63; (2022) Debating Uneven and Combined Development/Debating International Relations: A Forum, Millennium, 50(2), pp. 1–37.See also, Alex Callinicos & Justin Rosenberg (2008) Uneven and Combined Development: The Social-Relational Substratum of 'the International'?:An Exchange of Letters, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 21(1), pp. 77–112; Jamie Allinson & Alexander Anievas (2009) The Uses and Misuses of Uneven and Combined Development: An Anatomy of a Concept, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 22(1), pp. 47–67; Alexander Anievas & Kerem Nişancıoğlu (2015) How the West Came to Rule: The Geopolitical Origins of Capitalism (London: Pluto Press); Sam Ashman (Citation2010) Capitalism, Uneven and Combined Development, and the Transhistoric, in Mark Rupert & Hazel Smith (eds) Historical Materialism and Globalization, pp. 183–96 (London: Routledge); Neil Davidson (Citation2009) Putting the Nation Back into ‘the International', Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 22(1), pp. 9–28; Davidson (Citation2018) The Frontiers of Uneven and Combined Development, Historical Materialism, 26(3), pp. 52–78; Ray Kiely (Citation2012) Spatial Hierarchy And/Or Contemporary Geopolitics: What Can And Can’t Uneven And Combined Development Explain?, Cambridge Review Of International Affairs, 25(2), pp. 231–48; John M. Hobson (Citation2011) What’s at Stake in the Neo-Trotskyist Debate? Towards a Non-Eurocentric Historical Sociology of Uneven and Combined Development, Millennium, 40(1), pp. 147–66.2 Fouad Makki (Citation2015) Reframing Development Theory: The Significance of the Idea of Uneven and Combined Development, Theory and Society, 44(5), pp. 471–97.3 Anievas & Nişancioğlu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 93.4 Rosenberg, Why Is There No International, pp. 310–313.5 See Jamie Allinson (Citation2020) The Middle East and North Africa in the Lens of Marxist International Relations Theory in: RaymondHinnebusch & Jasmine K. Gani (eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System; pp. 211–224 (London: Routledge).6 See Kamran Matin (Citation2018) Lineages of the Islamic State: An International Historical Sociology of State (De-)Formation in Iraq, Journal of Historical Sociology, 31, pp. 6–24; Matin (Citation2013), Recasting Iranian Modernity: International Relations and Social Change (London: Routledge); Felipe Antunes de Oliveira (Citation2019) The Rise of the Latin American Far-Right Explained: Dependency Theory Meets Uneven and Combined Development, Globalizations, 16(7), pp. 1145–64; de Oliveira (Citation2020) Of Economic Whips and Political Necessities: A Contribution to the International Political Economy of Uneven and Combined Development, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 34(2), pp. 267–95.7 Gilbert Achcar (Citation2013) People Want: A Radical Exploration of the Arab Uprising (London: University of California Press), p. 78; Adam Hanieh (Citation2013), Lineages of Revolt: Issues of Contemporary Capitalism in the Middle East (London: Haymarket Books), p. 17.8 See Matteo Capasso (Citation2020) The War and the Economy: The Gradual Destruction of Libya, Review of African Political Economy, 47(166), pp. 545–67; Capasso (Citation2021) IR, imperialism, and the Global South: From Libya to Venezuela, Politics, 0(0), pp. 1–16. 9 Ussama Makdisi (2017) The Mythology of the Sectarian Middle East. Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, February 13. Available at: https://www.bakerinstitute.org/research/mythology-sectarian-middle-east, accessed August 15, 2023.10 Felipe Antunes de Oliveira (Citation2020) Development for Whom? Beyond the developed/underdeveloped Dichotomy, Journal of International Relations and Development, 23, p. 925.11 Makki, Reframing Development, p. 492.12 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, pp. 925–926.13 Ibid. p. 940.14 Ibid, p. 936.15 Matin, Recasting Iranian Modernity, p. 16.16 Leon Trotsky (Citation2008) The History of the Russian Revolution (Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books).17 The classical example is Walt WhitmanRostow’s (1960) The Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist Manifesto (London: Cambridge University Press). Also see Samuel Philips Huntington (Citation1971) The Change to Change: Modernization, Development, and Politics, Comparative Politics 3(3), pp. 283–322.18 Anievas & Nişancıoğlu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 44.19 Rosenberg, Why Is There No International, p. 310.20 Allinson, The Middle East and North Africa, p. 211.21 Nazih N. Ayubi (Citation2009) Over-Stating the Arab State: Politics and Society in the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris); Simon Bromley (Citation1994) Rethinking Middle East Politics, (Austin: University of Texas).22 Immanuel Wallerstein (Citation1974) The Modern World-System, V.1: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in the Sixteenth Century (New York: Academic Press); Fernando Henrique & Enzo Faletto (1979) Dependency and Development in Latin America (Oakland: University of California Press).23 Isam al-Khafaji (Citation2004) Tormented Births: Passages to Modernity in Europe and the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris), p. 9.24 Allinson, The Middle East and North Africa, p. 211.25 Ibid, p.218.26 Michael Burawoy (Citation1989) Two Methods in Search of Science: Skocpol versus Trotsky, Theory and Society, 18 (6), pp. 759–805.27 Trotsky, The History of the Russian Revolution, p. 5.28 Ibid, p. 429 Ibid, pp. 6–12.30 See Rosenberg, Basic Problems; Rosenberg, The “Philosophical Premises”; Rosenberg, Uneven and Combined Development; Rosenberg, Results and Prospects.31 Justin Rosenberg & Chris Boyle (2019) Understanding 2016: China, Brexit and Trump in the history of uneven and combined development, Journal of Historical Sociology, 32, pp. e52–e53.32 Ashman, Capitalism, Uneven and Combined Development; Davidson, Putting the Nation Back.33 Matin, Recasting Iranian Modernity; Rosenberg, Why Is There No International; Rosenberg, Basic Problems; Rosenberg, The “Philosophical Premises.”34 Allinson & Anievas, The Uses and Misuses.35 Davidson, Putting the nation back.36 Anievas & Nisancıoğlulu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 55.37 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, p. 936.38 Rosenberg et al., Debating Uneven and Combined Development, p. 5.39 Ali A. Ahmida (Citation2008) From Tribe to Class: The Origins and the Politics of the Resistance in Colonial Libya, Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell’Istituto italiano per l'Africa e l’Oriente, 63(2), p. 298.40 Adham Saoli (Citation2020) States and state-building in the Middle East, in Raymond Hinnebusch & Jasmin K. Gani (eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System, pp. 40–50 (London: Routledge); Bromley, Rethinking Middle East, p.61; Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2003) The International Politics Of The Middle East (Manchester: Manchester University Press), p. 15.41 Ahmida, From Tribe to Class, p. 299.42 Raymond Hinnebusch (Citation2020) Historical context of state formation in the Middle East: structure and agency, in Raymond Hinnebusch & Jasmin K. Gani(eds) The Routledge Handbook to the Middle East and North African State and States System, pp. 21–39 (London: Routledge), p. 25.43 Ibid, p.25.44 Ali Kadri (Citation2016) The Unmaking Of Arab Socialism (London: Anthem Press), p. 55.45 Trotsky, The History of the Russian Revolution, p. 5.46 Ibid, p. 5.47 Leon Trotsky (Citation1962) The Permanent Revolution and Results and Prospects (London: Labor), p.31.48 Leon Trotsky (1973 [1908]) 1905 (Harmondsworth: Penguin), p.67, as quoted in Rosenberg & Boyle, Understanding 201, p. e37.49 Hinnebusch, Historical context of state formation in the Middle East, p. 25.50 Ali A. Ahmida (Citation2012) Libya, Social Origins of Dictatorship, and the Challenge for Democracy, The Journal of the Middle East and Africa, 3(1), p. 73.51 Larbi Sadiki (Citation2011) Libya: Filling the void of a stateless state, Al Jazeera, 27 April 2011.52 Anievas & Nişancıoğlulu, How the West Came to Rule, p. 62.53 See Ayubi, Over-Stating the Arab State.54 Ibid, pp. 26–27.55 Hanieh, Lineages of Revolt, pp. 13–14, 174.56 See, for example, Henri Barkey (Citation1992) Political Economy of Stabilization Measures in the Middle East (New York: St. Martin’s Press); Eva Bellin (Citation2004) The Robustness of Authoritarianism in the Middle East: Exceptionalism in Comparative Perspective, Comparative Politics 36(2), pp. 139–157.57 Neil Davidson (n.Citationd.) Uneven and Combined Development: Modernity, Modernism, Revolution. Available online at: https://core.ac.uk/download/ pdf/296196763.pdf, accessed August 15, 2023.58 Ibid.59 See Fanar Haddad (Citation2020) Understanding ‘Sectarianism’: Sunni-Shi’a Relations in the Modern Arab World (London: Hurst).60 Ayubi, Over-Stating the Arab State, pp. 196–203.61 Linda Matar (Citation2016) The Political Economy Of Investment In Syria (New York: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 65–90; Capasso, The War and the Economy, pp. 552–553.62 See Salam Said (Citation2018) The Uprising and the Economic Interests of the Syrian Military-mercantile Complex; in R. Hinnebusch & O. Imady (eds) The Syrian Uprising: Domestic Origins and Early Trajectory (London: Routledge), pp. 56–76.63 Kadri, The Unmaking Of Arab Socialism, pp. 58–68.64 See Matar, The Political Economy Of Investment In Syria, 6; Capasso, The War and the Economy, pp. 555–558.65 Angela Joya (Citation2007) Syria’s Transition, 1970–2005: From Centralization of the State to Market Economy, in: P. Zarembka (ed.) Transitions in Latin America and in Poland and Syria (London: Emerald Group Publishing Limited), pp. 183–189.66 Hanna Batatu (Citation1981) Some Observations on the Social Roots of Syria's Ruling, Military Group and the Causes for Its Dominance, Middle East Journal, 35(3), p. 340.67 Matteo Capasso (n.Citationd.) Wars, Capital and the MENA region. Available online at: https://pomeps.org/wars-capital-and-the-mena-region, accessed August 15, 2023; Capasso, IR, Imperialism, and the Global South.68 Benjamin Selwyn (Citation2011) Trotsky, Gerschenkron and the political economy of late capitalist development, Economy and Society, 40(3), p. 432.69 Oliveira, Development for Whom?, p. 924.70 See Matteo Capasso (Citation2023) The perils of capitalist modernity for the Global South: the case of Libya, Review of International Political Economy, 30(2), pp. 632–653 on how ‘new every day imaginaries’ created by combining capitalism with local cultural structures put ‘limits to mobilising for political change.’
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Middle East Critique
Middle East Critique AREA STUDIES-
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