Russian, Soviet, and
Post-Soviet Economic History: New Frontiers
A conference sponsored by the Yale University Program in Economic History
November 1-2, 2013
28 Hillhouse Avenue, Tobin Lounge
The conference will take place at Yale University, on the afternoon of November 1st and on November 2nd.
The conference is open to the public, and all are welcome to attend, regardless of institutional or departmental affliliation. Papers are password protected; please contact the authors directly for more information.
Conference organizers: Steven Nafziger, Williams College (steven.nafziger@williams.edu); Tracy Dennison, Caltech (tkd@hdd.caltech.edu)
Local arrangements: Timothy Guinnane, Yale University (timothy.guinnane@yale.edu)
Program for Conference Russian, Soviet, and Post-Soviet Economic History: New Frontiers
Yale University, Program in Economic History
Each presenter will have 10 minutes to make some remarks, which will then be followed by approximately 35 minutes of questions, comments, and discussion. As such, all attendees are expected to have read the papers. There will be no formal discussants. Additional papers by attendees that cannot be included on the program due to space constraints will be made available on the conference’s web site, and participants are encouraged to read them and respond directly to the authors at the conference and afterwards.
Day 1: Friday, November 1, 2013
1:50 pm – Welcoming Remarks
2:00 - 3:30 pm – Session 1: Tsarist Russia (Session Chairperson: Paul Bushkovitch)
Kelly O’Neill, Harvard University: “Small Ports and Unruly Rivers: Towards a Spatial History of the (Imperial) Russian Economy"
Ekaterina Pravilova, Princeton University: “Unlocking Hidden Resources: Property and Economy in Late Imperial Russia”
3:30 – 4:00 pm – Coffee break
4:00 – 5:30 pm – Session 2: Serfdom and Emancipation (Session Chairperson: Timothy Guinnane)
Steven Nafziger, Williams College: "Bargaining, Buying In, and Opting Out: New Evidence on Russian Serf Emancipation and Land Reform"
Scott Gehlbach & Evgeny Finkel, University of Wisconsin and George Washington
University: “Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence from Russia's Emancipation of
7:00 pm – Dinner (invitation only)
Day 2: Saturday, November 2, 2013
9:00 - 10:30 am – Session 3: Industrialization and Development in Tsarist Russia (Session Chairperson: Steven Nafgizer)
Andrei Markevich, New Economic School, Moscow: “Economic Development of the
Russian Empire in a Regional Perspective”
Amanda Gregg, Yale University: “Factory Productivity and the Concession System of
Incorporation in Late Imperial Russia”
10:30 - 10:45 am – Coffee break
10:45 – 12:15 pm – Session 4: The Revolutionary Era (Session Chairperson: Erika Monahan)
Hassan Malik, European University Institute: "The Inter-Revolutionary Recovery and Rally"
Martin Kragh, Stockholm School of Economics: “Expropriation in the Russian Revolution: The Case of Swedish Firms and Households”
12:15 – 1:30 pm – Lunch (at conference venue)
1:30 – 3:00 pm – Session 5: The Soviet Economy and the Recent Past (Session Chairperson: Tracy Dennison)
Mark Harrison, University of Warwick (with Inga Zaksauskiene): “Counterintelligence in a Command Economy”
Kathryn Hendley, University of Wisconsin: “Bargaining with Strangers: Explaining the Behavior of Russians in the Aftermath of Auto Accidents"
Additional Invited Attendees
Leonid Borodkin (Higher School of Economics and Moscow State University)
Erika Monahan (University of New Mexico)
Thomas Owens (The Davis Center, Harvard)
Paul Bushkovitch (Yale)
Naomi Lamoreaux (Yale)
Francesca Trivellato (Yale)
Timothy Guinnane (Yale)
Tracy Dennison (Caltech)
Other Research of Conference Participants:
Stefan Link, "Soviet Fordism in Practice: Building and Operating the Soviet River Rouge, 1927-1945"
Thomas Owen, "Measuring Business Cycles in the Russian Empire"
Erika Monahan, "For Profit and Tsar: Commerce in Early Modern Russia"