This article examines the conflict between traditional Marxist attitudes toward war and the problem of the nuclear revolution. It shows how the advent of the nuclear revolution in the 1950s undermined traditional Marxist-Leninist concepts of war, and then goes on to argue that this development must be placed at the centre of contemporary Marxian IR if it is to have explanatory power in the twenty-first century. To make this case directly, it engages with Justin Rosenberg’s revival of Trotsky’s idea of uneven and combined development and its subsidiary law of ‘the whip of external necessity’, and argues that the whip can remain salient today only if one accepts the political utility of nuclear war. The impasse created by the nuclear revoluti...
This article performs three functions. First, it offers a revisionist interpretation of the 1928 Kel...
Jervis writes "perhaps the most striking characteristic of the postwar world is just that-it can be ...
This paper seeks to answer the question of how the development of nuclearweapons changed the nature ...
This article examines the conflict between traditional Marxist attitudes toward war and the problem ...
The revival of nuclear strategy in US policy and scholarship has been strengthened by arguments that...
This article contributes to an ongoing debate about the role of the thermonuclear revolution in real...
This book review of Lieber and Press's “The myth of the nuclear revolution: Power politics in the at...
There are important similarities between the pattern of behavior Karl Marx identified with respect t...
This article is part of a special issue of International Affairs (July 2019) on ‘Re-visioning war an...
The splitting of atomic nuclei carried military implications that powerfully shaped American foreign...
This article investigates an ambitious attempt to materialise the imaginary of atomic‑powered commun...
Journal ArticleWith the spectre of nuclear weapons acting as a restraint upon the nations in terms o...
This Introduction presents the seven closely interlinked papers that explore the theme of this Speci...
and socialist theory IN THE EARLY 1980s militarism has returned to the centre of the political arena...
This article examines the humanitarian approach to nuclear weapons, which has reinvigorated the effo...
This article performs three functions. First, it offers a revisionist interpretation of the 1928 Kel...
Jervis writes "perhaps the most striking characteristic of the postwar world is just that-it can be ...
This paper seeks to answer the question of how the development of nuclearweapons changed the nature ...
This article examines the conflict between traditional Marxist attitudes toward war and the problem ...
The revival of nuclear strategy in US policy and scholarship has been strengthened by arguments that...
This article contributes to an ongoing debate about the role of the thermonuclear revolution in real...
This book review of Lieber and Press's “The myth of the nuclear revolution: Power politics in the at...
There are important similarities between the pattern of behavior Karl Marx identified with respect t...
This article is part of a special issue of International Affairs (July 2019) on ‘Re-visioning war an...
The splitting of atomic nuclei carried military implications that powerfully shaped American foreign...
This article investigates an ambitious attempt to materialise the imaginary of atomic‑powered commun...
Journal ArticleWith the spectre of nuclear weapons acting as a restraint upon the nations in terms o...
This Introduction presents the seven closely interlinked papers that explore the theme of this Speci...
and socialist theory IN THE EARLY 1980s militarism has returned to the centre of the political arena...
This article examines the humanitarian approach to nuclear weapons, which has reinvigorated the effo...
This article performs three functions. First, it offers a revisionist interpretation of the 1928 Kel...
Jervis writes "perhaps the most striking characteristic of the postwar world is just that-it can be ...
This paper seeks to answer the question of how the development of nuclearweapons changed the nature ...