The Geography of Power

Steppes and the Deep Roots of Autocracy

William R Thompson author Leila Zakhirova author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Publishing:30th Sep '26

£40.00

This title is due to be published on 30th September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Geography of Power cover

Explores why autocracies cluster from Siberia to Central Africa, tracing historical links between geography, conflict, and power.

Why do autocracies concentrate between Siberia and Central Africa? This book explores how geography, nomadic-sedentary conflicts and political economy shaped enduring authoritarian patterns, reinforcing power across half the globe while leaving the remainder largely untouched. A compelling, interdisciplinary analysis of the deep roots of autocracy.Why are most contemporary autocracies concentrated between Siberia and Central Africa while other regions remain largely democratic? This book uncovers the deep historical forces behind that divide, tracing how geography-particularly the vast steppe grasslands-and political-economic conflicts between nomadic and sedentary societies shaped enduring patterns of power. These structured conflicts reinforced authoritarian persistence across half the globe, creating a binary world with starkly different opportunities and threats. The result is a long-standing geopolitical fault line that continues to shape global politics today, exemplified by the autocratic axis of China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea. Combining insights from geography, history, and political economy, this book offers a compelling explanation of why authoritarianism thrives -and why democracy prevails elsewhere.

'Thompson and Zakhirova build upon their novel observation regarding the geographic distribution of authoritarianism, refusing simple explanations, and providing a master class on assembling important insights from half a dozen academic fields.' Robert A. Denemark, Department of Political Science, University of Delaware
'This is a magisterial world-historical synopsis of research and theorizing about the long-term causes of autocratic regimes. Long exposure to threats from nomadic steppe confederacies lay the tracks for centralized autocratic regimes necessary for defense that become ensconced along steppe frontiers. The authors also examine the role that differences in regime types between democracies and autocracies play in past and contemporary struggles for global power. This has important implications for what is likely to happen in the rest of the 21st century.' Christopher Chase-Dunn, Department of Sociology, University of California, Riverside

ISBN: 9781009783774

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

300 pages