The Waves of Time: Long-Term Change and International Relations
By (Author) K. R. Dark
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
6th October 2016
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
327.1
Hardback
304
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
572g
Since the end of the Cold War, analysts of international politics have given much greater attention to issues of change. It has become increasingly clear to specialists from many fields that any understanding of large-scale political change must encompass far longer timescales than has been usual in the study of world politics, and must incorporate multi-disciplinary perspectives. This book evaluates and draws on relevant theoretical approaches from other disciplines such as sociology, economics, geography, history, anthropology and archaeology, as well as evolutionary theory and the mathematical study of complexity. Using an epistemological framework, Dark sets out a theory of long-term world political change: the theory of Macrodynamics. This is then applied to historical, anthropological and archaeological data to explain the changing forms of political organization, from the earliest human societies to the late twentieth century. The resulting analysis is a reinterpretation of the processes of global political change in the past and present. This, in turn, opens new areas of enquiry in the study of international relations and has profound implications for how we understand the changing world of today.
K. R. Dark is Associate Professor at the University of Reading, UK. His area of interest covers the interdisciplinary relationship between archaeological and historical research and studies of contemporary economics and international relations.