1. A civil war within the 'Russian World'; 2. A theory of civil war onset in post-soviet Eurasia; 3. Before Maidan; 4. Regime change (Maidan); 5. Irredentist annexation (Crimea); 6. The Russian spring (East Ukraine); 7. The war and Russian intervention (Donbas); 8. A frozen conflict thaws.
A concise account of the roots of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, describing how the 2013–14 intra-Ukrainian political clashes were exploited by Russia.
Dominique Arel is Chair of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Ottawa. His publications include Rebounding Identities: The Politics of Identity in Russia and Ukraine (co-edited with Blair A. Ruble, 2006). He organizes the Annual Danyliw Research Seminar on Ukraine and is Director of the Annual ASN World Convention at Columbia University. Jesse Driscoll is an associate professor of political science at the School of Global Policy and Strategy at the University of California San Diego. His publications include Warlords and Coalition Politics in Post-Soviet States (Cambridge, 2015) and Doing Global Fieldwork (2021).
'The 'unnamed war' in this brilliantly argued, comprehensively
researched, and historically accurate book began as a civil war
within Ukraine primarily fought between factions of what Russia has
long imagined as their world. From this perspective, Arel's and
Driscoll's analytic model reveals missed opportunities for a
fragile peace that might have avoided Russia's imperialist
invasion, where we can now envision only an endless war of
attrition.' David D. Laitin, Professor of Political Science,
Stanford University
'Contrary to explanations that emphasize the foreign origins of the
war in Ukraine, Arel and Driscoll understand it instead through a
logic of escalating violence, rooting it in significant part in
domestic Ukrainian political dynamics. In doing so, they bring
to light new aspects of the war and Moscow's miscalculations
leading up to its full-scale invasion in February 2022.' Mark R.
Beissinger, Henry W. Putnam Professor, Department of Politics,
Princeton University
'It is impossible to fully comprehend the onset and course of the
full-scale Ukraine-Russia war that began with the Russian invasion
in February 2022 without understanding the politics and violence
that preceded it. Using a strategic action model as a guide, Arel
and Driscoll's Ukraine's Unnamed War provides the definitive
account of the Ukraine-Russia conflict from 2013–2021. Eschewing
overgeneralization and writing with a style accessible to
non-specialists, the authors show, in detail, how the decisions,
agency, and identity of local Ukrainian actors prevented a
political solution and developed the conditions that would spark a
major conventional war in Europe.' Roger Petersen, Arthur and Ruth
Sloan Professor of Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
'In the heat of the devastating war in Ukraine, Arel and Driscoll
have given us a cool and courageous account of the complex and
fraught prehistory of Putin's invasion. Their argument is the most
compelling account of how a civil war in a divided country turned
into a hot war between two neighbouring states.' Ronald Grigor
Suny, William H. Sewell, Jr. Distinguished University Professor
Emeritus of History and Emeritus Professor of Political Science,
The University of Michigan, and Emeritus Professor of Political
Science and History, The University of Chicago
'This is no 'instant book' churned out to provide urgently needed
information, though it certainly contains important facts, but
rather a substantive study reflecting long-term research on Ukraine
and the surrounding region. … Recommended.' T. P. Johnson,
Choice
'This book makes a significant academic contribution to shaping a
political vision of postwar Ukraine based on intra-Ukrainian
compromise. Although the main readership, according to the authors,
is a non-specialist audience, I would recommend this insightful
theoretically and empirically rich book mainly to policymakers and
researchers interested in Ukrainian politics, identity and memory
politics, studies of nationalism, post-Soviet studies and other
relevant fields.' Yana Volkova, Europe-Asia Studies
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