New article in “Globalizations” – Decentring narratives of (de)globalization and crisis: Uzbekistan’s ‘everyday’ political economy amidst Russia’s war in Ukraine

I am excited to share my latest open-access article, inspired by the final chapter of my PhD.

Title: “Decentring narratives of (de)globalization and crisis: Uzbekistan’s ‘everyday’ political economy amidst Russia’s war in Ukraine”

Abstract: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is commonly considered a global crisis, reinforcing deglobalization. However, Uzbekistan’s experience challenges this conventional wisdom, as Uzbekistani actors have renounced both economic decoupling and geopolitical alignment. I employ a critical and constructivist ‘everyday’ International Political Economy (IPE) approach, drawing on 54 fieldwork interviews in Uzbekistan, statistics, and public opinion surveys. I argue that Uzbekistani actors challenge Eurocentric narratives of deglobalization through normative agency at three levels: state, business, and ‘everyday’. I also explore the normative conflict between these three levels in interaction with global (post)colonial capitalism, which I describe as ‘conflictual hybridity’, with a specific focus on the normative power of micro-actors, including labourers and migrants. In a context of ‘double coloniality’ between material/geographical and normative/political Russo-Uzbekistani postcolonial hybridity and Western normative power, I aim to debunk elite-centric geopolitical imaginaries of non-Western agency during crises, or lack thereof, by foregrounding the ‘everyday’ of the Global Majority.

Link: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/epdf/10.1080/14747731.2025.2533666?needAccess=true. It is open access, so everyone should be able to access it. 

In case you find it insightful, please share it on your social media, so it can reach a wider audience. Here are my posts on X/Twitter, Bluesky, and LinkedIn. This is particularly important for early-career researchers like me, as the job market is quite challenging. Thank you!

Leave a comment