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The academic study of the Soviet economy in the US was founded to help fight the Cold War. Vladimir Kontorovich evaluates how well the new field fulfilled this task, and shows that it largely neglected the military sector, which underpinned the Soviet Cold War effort. Professional norms of economics and political pressures drove researchers to ignore the priorities of their government sponsors and to fundamentally misinterpret their subject.
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The academic study of the Soviet economy in the US was founded to help fight the Cold War. Vladimir Kontorovich evaluates how well the new field fulfilled this task, and shows that it largely neglected the military sector, which underpinned the Soviet Cold War effort. Professional norms of economics and political pressures drove researchers to ignore the priorities of their government sponsors and to fundamentally misinterpret their subject.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Oktober 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 544g
- ISBN-13: 9780190868123
- ISBN-10: 0190868120
- Artikelnr.: 55460151
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Oktober 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 239mm x 157mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 544g
- ISBN-13: 9780190868123
- ISBN-10: 0190868120
- Artikelnr.: 55460151
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Vladimir Kontorovich is Professor of Economics at Haverford College.
* Table of Contents
* Preface
* Introduction: Why bother with the writings on a defunct economy by
authors now at best retired?
* PART ONE. SOVIETOLOGY AND THE SOVIET MILITARY POWER
* Chapter 1. The origin and structure of Sovietology
* 1.1 The Cold War roots
* 1.2 Cradle-to-grave national security funding
* 1.3 The industrial organization of Sovietology
* 1.3.1 Structure and conduct
* 1.3.2 Reliability of results
* 1.3.3 Status within economics
* 1.4 Colleagues and competitors
* 1.4.1 The British, outsiders, political scientists, and others
* 1.4.2 Academics and government analysts
* Chapter 2. The Politburo's Holy of Holies
* 2.1 A pillar of the system's original design
* 2.2 A wartime-size peacetime military sector
* 2.2.1 Official Soviet data
* 2.2.2 Western estimates
* 2.2.3 Trying to make sense of it all
* 2.3 The defense industry
* 2.3.1 A sector apart
* 2.3.2 The most favored sector
* 2.3.3 The most successful sector
* 2.4 Mobilization preparations
* 2.5 Importance and impact
* PART II. SOVIET MILITARY POWER IN THE SOVIETOLOGICAL MIRROR
* Chapter 3. The Missing Sector
* 3.1 How to document an absence
* 3.2 Textbooks
* 3.2.1 Which sectors merited a chapter
* 3.2.2 Applying a finer comb: index entries
* 3.3 Research volumes
* 3.4 Publications on the military sector proper
* 3.4.1 Journal articles
* 3.4.2 Books
* 3.5 The user side
* 3.5.1 Comparative economic systems textbooks
* 3.5.2 Introductory economics textbooks
* 3.6 Summary
* Chapter 4. Civilianizing the objectives of the planners
* 4.1 Objectives and behavior in economics
* 4.2 Who exactly were the planners?
* 4.3 The Soviet account of the rulers' objectives
* 4.3.1 The validity of self-proclaimed objectives
* 4.3.2 Constitutions and planning manuals
* 4.3.3 Can they be believed?
* 4.4 The Sovietological account of planners' objectives
* 4.4.1 Sources: fragmentation in action
* 4.4.2 Sovietology's standard view
* 4.5 Making sense of multiple objectives
* 4.6 Problems with the standard view of the rulers' objectives
* 4.7 Patterns that seem to suggest production for its own sake
* 4.8 Bringing the Soviet rulers back into the fold of rational actors
* Chapter 5. Civilianizing Industrialization
* 5.1 The standard account of industrialization
* 5.2 Stalin's account of industrialization
* 5.2.1 Objectives of industrialization
* 5.2.2 The role of heavy industry
* 5.3 How the standard account developed
* 5.4 Problems with the standard account
* 5.5 The banality of military industrialization
* 5.6 The real industrialization debate
* 5.7 Taking socialism too seriously
* 5.8 Summary
* PART III. WHY GOVERNMENT MONEY COULD NOT BUY ECONOMISTS' LOVE
* Chapter 6. The Secrecy Hypothesis
* 6.1 The shape of the constraint
* 6.1.1 Secrecy in Soviet society
* 6.1.2 Economic information: civilian and military sectors
* 6.1.3 Breaches in the wall
* 6.2 The constraint was not binding
* 6.2.1 Concern about secrecy and the recognition of gaps in knowledge
* 6.2.2 The use of roundabout means to overcome secrecy
* 6.2.3 Response to the writings on the military sector
* 6.3 Direct test of the secrecy hypothesis
* 6.3.1 Sovietologists vs the New York Times
* 6.3.2 What an interested scholar found in Soviet publications
* 6.4 Conclusion
* Chapter 7. Beating Soviet Swords into Sovietological Ploughshares
* 7.1 The norms of the economics profession
* 7.1.1 How scholars choose research topics
* 7.1.2 How Sovietology fit in
* 7.1.3 Military topics out of favor with economists
* 7.1.4 Dressing military buildup in fashionable civvies
* 7.2 Looking for the essence of socialism
* 7.3 Politics
* 7.3.1 The politics and economics of science
* 7.3.2 Can Sovietologists inform us of each other's bias?
* 7.3.3 Proliferation of digressions
* 7.3.4 Interpretation: exculpatory incantations
* 7.4 Persistence of civilianization and Soviet economic history
* Chapter 8. Civilianization elsewhere
* 8.1 Writings on German economy in the 1930s
* 8.1.1 Hitler's military economy
* 8.1.2 Rearmament in the economics journals of the time
* 8.1.3 Why economists neglected rearmament
* 8.2 (No) violence in primitive societies
* 8.3 The marginalization of military history
* Conclusion
* Appendices
* Appendix 1.1 Alternative estimates of the number of Sovietologists
* Appendix 3.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 3
* Appendix 3.2 Counting index entries in books
* Appendix 3.3. Books on the Soviet military sector (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.4. Books on particular sectors of the Soviet economy other
than external and agriculture published before 1975 (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.5 Books on Soviet agriculture (chronological order)
* Appendix 3.6 Books on Soviet foreign economic relations
(chronological order)
* Appendix 4.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 4
* Appendix 8.1. How literature was surveyed for section 8.1
* BIBLIOGRAPHY
* Preface
* Introduction: Why bother with the writings on a defunct economy by
authors now at best retired?
* PART ONE. SOVIETOLOGY AND THE SOVIET MILITARY POWER
* Chapter 1. The origin and structure of Sovietology
* 1.1 The Cold War roots
* 1.2 Cradle-to-grave national security funding
* 1.3 The industrial organization of Sovietology
* 1.3.1 Structure and conduct
* 1.3.2 Reliability of results
* 1.3.3 Status within economics
* 1.4 Colleagues and competitors
* 1.4.1 The British, outsiders, political scientists, and others
* 1.4.2 Academics and government analysts
* Chapter 2. The Politburo's Holy of Holies
* 2.1 A pillar of the system's original design
* 2.2 A wartime-size peacetime military sector
* 2.2.1 Official Soviet data
* 2.2.2 Western estimates
* 2.2.3 Trying to make sense of it all
* 2.3 The defense industry
* 2.3.1 A sector apart
* 2.3.2 The most favored sector
* 2.3.3 The most successful sector
* 2.4 Mobilization preparations
* 2.5 Importance and impact
* PART II. SOVIET MILITARY POWER IN THE SOVIETOLOGICAL MIRROR
* Chapter 3. The Missing Sector
* 3.1 How to document an absence
* 3.2 Textbooks
* 3.2.1 Which sectors merited a chapter
* 3.2.2 Applying a finer comb: index entries
* 3.3 Research volumes
* 3.4 Publications on the military sector proper
* 3.4.1 Journal articles
* 3.4.2 Books
* 3.5 The user side
* 3.5.1 Comparative economic systems textbooks
* 3.5.2 Introductory economics textbooks
* 3.6 Summary
* Chapter 4. Civilianizing the objectives of the planners
* 4.1 Objectives and behavior in economics
* 4.2 Who exactly were the planners?
* 4.3 The Soviet account of the rulers' objectives
* 4.3.1 The validity of self-proclaimed objectives
* 4.3.2 Constitutions and planning manuals
* 4.3.3 Can they be believed?
* 4.4 The Sovietological account of planners' objectives
* 4.4.1 Sources: fragmentation in action
* 4.4.2 Sovietology's standard view
* 4.5 Making sense of multiple objectives
* 4.6 Problems with the standard view of the rulers' objectives
* 4.7 Patterns that seem to suggest production for its own sake
* 4.8 Bringing the Soviet rulers back into the fold of rational actors
* Chapter 5. Civilianizing Industrialization
* 5.1 The standard account of industrialization
* 5.2 Stalin's account of industrialization
* 5.2.1 Objectives of industrialization
* 5.2.2 The role of heavy industry
* 5.3 How the standard account developed
* 5.4 Problems with the standard account
* 5.5 The banality of military industrialization
* 5.6 The real industrialization debate
* 5.7 Taking socialism too seriously
* 5.8 Summary
* PART III. WHY GOVERNMENT MONEY COULD NOT BUY ECONOMISTS' LOVE
* Chapter 6. The Secrecy Hypothesis
* 6.1 The shape of the constraint
* 6.1.1 Secrecy in Soviet society
* 6.1.2 Economic information: civilian and military sectors
* 6.1.3 Breaches in the wall
* 6.2 The constraint was not binding
* 6.2.1 Concern about secrecy and the recognition of gaps in knowledge
* 6.2.2 The use of roundabout means to overcome secrecy
* 6.2.3 Response to the writings on the military sector
* 6.3 Direct test of the secrecy hypothesis
* 6.3.1 Sovietologists vs the New York Times
* 6.3.2 What an interested scholar found in Soviet publications
* 6.4 Conclusion
* Chapter 7. Beating Soviet Swords into Sovietological Ploughshares
* 7.1 The norms of the economics profession
* 7.1.1 How scholars choose research topics
* 7.1.2 How Sovietology fit in
* 7.1.3 Military topics out of favor with economists
* 7.1.4 Dressing military buildup in fashionable civvies
* 7.2 Looking for the essence of socialism
* 7.3 Politics
* 7.3.1 The politics and economics of science
* 7.3.2 Can Sovietologists inform us of each other's bias?
* 7.3.3 Proliferation of digressions
* 7.3.4 Interpretation: exculpatory incantations
* 7.4 Persistence of civilianization and Soviet economic history
* Chapter 8. Civilianization elsewhere
* 8.1 Writings on German economy in the 1930s
* 8.1.1 Hitler's military economy
* 8.1.2 Rearmament in the economics journals of the time
* 8.1.3 Why economists neglected rearmament
* 8.2 (No) violence in primitive societies
* 8.3 The marginalization of military history
* Conclusion
* Appendices
* Appendix 1.1 Alternative estimates of the number of Sovietologists
* Appendix 3.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 3
* Appendix 3.2 Counting index entries in books
* Appendix 3.3. Books on the Soviet military sector (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.4. Books on particular sectors of the Soviet economy other
than external and agriculture published before 1975 (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.5 Books on Soviet agriculture (chronological order)
* Appendix 3.6 Books on Soviet foreign economic relations
(chronological order)
* Appendix 4.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 4
* Appendix 8.1. How literature was surveyed for section 8.1
* BIBLIOGRAPHY
* Table of Contents
* Preface
* Introduction: Why bother with the writings on a defunct economy by
authors now at best retired?
* PART ONE. SOVIETOLOGY AND THE SOVIET MILITARY POWER
* Chapter 1. The origin and structure of Sovietology
* 1.1 The Cold War roots
* 1.2 Cradle-to-grave national security funding
* 1.3 The industrial organization of Sovietology
* 1.3.1 Structure and conduct
* 1.3.2 Reliability of results
* 1.3.3 Status within economics
* 1.4 Colleagues and competitors
* 1.4.1 The British, outsiders, political scientists, and others
* 1.4.2 Academics and government analysts
* Chapter 2. The Politburo's Holy of Holies
* 2.1 A pillar of the system's original design
* 2.2 A wartime-size peacetime military sector
* 2.2.1 Official Soviet data
* 2.2.2 Western estimates
* 2.2.3 Trying to make sense of it all
* 2.3 The defense industry
* 2.3.1 A sector apart
* 2.3.2 The most favored sector
* 2.3.3 The most successful sector
* 2.4 Mobilization preparations
* 2.5 Importance and impact
* PART II. SOVIET MILITARY POWER IN THE SOVIETOLOGICAL MIRROR
* Chapter 3. The Missing Sector
* 3.1 How to document an absence
* 3.2 Textbooks
* 3.2.1 Which sectors merited a chapter
* 3.2.2 Applying a finer comb: index entries
* 3.3 Research volumes
* 3.4 Publications on the military sector proper
* 3.4.1 Journal articles
* 3.4.2 Books
* 3.5 The user side
* 3.5.1 Comparative economic systems textbooks
* 3.5.2 Introductory economics textbooks
* 3.6 Summary
* Chapter 4. Civilianizing the objectives of the planners
* 4.1 Objectives and behavior in economics
* 4.2 Who exactly were the planners?
* 4.3 The Soviet account of the rulers' objectives
* 4.3.1 The validity of self-proclaimed objectives
* 4.3.2 Constitutions and planning manuals
* 4.3.3 Can they be believed?
* 4.4 The Sovietological account of planners' objectives
* 4.4.1 Sources: fragmentation in action
* 4.4.2 Sovietology's standard view
* 4.5 Making sense of multiple objectives
* 4.6 Problems with the standard view of the rulers' objectives
* 4.7 Patterns that seem to suggest production for its own sake
* 4.8 Bringing the Soviet rulers back into the fold of rational actors
* Chapter 5. Civilianizing Industrialization
* 5.1 The standard account of industrialization
* 5.2 Stalin's account of industrialization
* 5.2.1 Objectives of industrialization
* 5.2.2 The role of heavy industry
* 5.3 How the standard account developed
* 5.4 Problems with the standard account
* 5.5 The banality of military industrialization
* 5.6 The real industrialization debate
* 5.7 Taking socialism too seriously
* 5.8 Summary
* PART III. WHY GOVERNMENT MONEY COULD NOT BUY ECONOMISTS' LOVE
* Chapter 6. The Secrecy Hypothesis
* 6.1 The shape of the constraint
* 6.1.1 Secrecy in Soviet society
* 6.1.2 Economic information: civilian and military sectors
* 6.1.3 Breaches in the wall
* 6.2 The constraint was not binding
* 6.2.1 Concern about secrecy and the recognition of gaps in knowledge
* 6.2.2 The use of roundabout means to overcome secrecy
* 6.2.3 Response to the writings on the military sector
* 6.3 Direct test of the secrecy hypothesis
* 6.3.1 Sovietologists vs the New York Times
* 6.3.2 What an interested scholar found in Soviet publications
* 6.4 Conclusion
* Chapter 7. Beating Soviet Swords into Sovietological Ploughshares
* 7.1 The norms of the economics profession
* 7.1.1 How scholars choose research topics
* 7.1.2 How Sovietology fit in
* 7.1.3 Military topics out of favor with economists
* 7.1.4 Dressing military buildup in fashionable civvies
* 7.2 Looking for the essence of socialism
* 7.3 Politics
* 7.3.1 The politics and economics of science
* 7.3.2 Can Sovietologists inform us of each other's bias?
* 7.3.3 Proliferation of digressions
* 7.3.4 Interpretation: exculpatory incantations
* 7.4 Persistence of civilianization and Soviet economic history
* Chapter 8. Civilianization elsewhere
* 8.1 Writings on German economy in the 1930s
* 8.1.1 Hitler's military economy
* 8.1.2 Rearmament in the economics journals of the time
* 8.1.3 Why economists neglected rearmament
* 8.2 (No) violence in primitive societies
* 8.3 The marginalization of military history
* Conclusion
* Appendices
* Appendix 1.1 Alternative estimates of the number of Sovietologists
* Appendix 3.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 3
* Appendix 3.2 Counting index entries in books
* Appendix 3.3. Books on the Soviet military sector (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.4. Books on particular sectors of the Soviet economy other
than external and agriculture published before 1975 (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.5 Books on Soviet agriculture (chronological order)
* Appendix 3.6 Books on Soviet foreign economic relations
(chronological order)
* Appendix 4.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 4
* Appendix 8.1. How literature was surveyed for section 8.1
* BIBLIOGRAPHY
* Preface
* Introduction: Why bother with the writings on a defunct economy by
authors now at best retired?
* PART ONE. SOVIETOLOGY AND THE SOVIET MILITARY POWER
* Chapter 1. The origin and structure of Sovietology
* 1.1 The Cold War roots
* 1.2 Cradle-to-grave national security funding
* 1.3 The industrial organization of Sovietology
* 1.3.1 Structure and conduct
* 1.3.2 Reliability of results
* 1.3.3 Status within economics
* 1.4 Colleagues and competitors
* 1.4.1 The British, outsiders, political scientists, and others
* 1.4.2 Academics and government analysts
* Chapter 2. The Politburo's Holy of Holies
* 2.1 A pillar of the system's original design
* 2.2 A wartime-size peacetime military sector
* 2.2.1 Official Soviet data
* 2.2.2 Western estimates
* 2.2.3 Trying to make sense of it all
* 2.3 The defense industry
* 2.3.1 A sector apart
* 2.3.2 The most favored sector
* 2.3.3 The most successful sector
* 2.4 Mobilization preparations
* 2.5 Importance and impact
* PART II. SOVIET MILITARY POWER IN THE SOVIETOLOGICAL MIRROR
* Chapter 3. The Missing Sector
* 3.1 How to document an absence
* 3.2 Textbooks
* 3.2.1 Which sectors merited a chapter
* 3.2.2 Applying a finer comb: index entries
* 3.3 Research volumes
* 3.4 Publications on the military sector proper
* 3.4.1 Journal articles
* 3.4.2 Books
* 3.5 The user side
* 3.5.1 Comparative economic systems textbooks
* 3.5.2 Introductory economics textbooks
* 3.6 Summary
* Chapter 4. Civilianizing the objectives of the planners
* 4.1 Objectives and behavior in economics
* 4.2 Who exactly were the planners?
* 4.3 The Soviet account of the rulers' objectives
* 4.3.1 The validity of self-proclaimed objectives
* 4.3.2 Constitutions and planning manuals
* 4.3.3 Can they be believed?
* 4.4 The Sovietological account of planners' objectives
* 4.4.1 Sources: fragmentation in action
* 4.4.2 Sovietology's standard view
* 4.5 Making sense of multiple objectives
* 4.6 Problems with the standard view of the rulers' objectives
* 4.7 Patterns that seem to suggest production for its own sake
* 4.8 Bringing the Soviet rulers back into the fold of rational actors
* Chapter 5. Civilianizing Industrialization
* 5.1 The standard account of industrialization
* 5.2 Stalin's account of industrialization
* 5.2.1 Objectives of industrialization
* 5.2.2 The role of heavy industry
* 5.3 How the standard account developed
* 5.4 Problems with the standard account
* 5.5 The banality of military industrialization
* 5.6 The real industrialization debate
* 5.7 Taking socialism too seriously
* 5.8 Summary
* PART III. WHY GOVERNMENT MONEY COULD NOT BUY ECONOMISTS' LOVE
* Chapter 6. The Secrecy Hypothesis
* 6.1 The shape of the constraint
* 6.1.1 Secrecy in Soviet society
* 6.1.2 Economic information: civilian and military sectors
* 6.1.3 Breaches in the wall
* 6.2 The constraint was not binding
* 6.2.1 Concern about secrecy and the recognition of gaps in knowledge
* 6.2.2 The use of roundabout means to overcome secrecy
* 6.2.3 Response to the writings on the military sector
* 6.3 Direct test of the secrecy hypothesis
* 6.3.1 Sovietologists vs the New York Times
* 6.3.2 What an interested scholar found in Soviet publications
* 6.4 Conclusion
* Chapter 7. Beating Soviet Swords into Sovietological Ploughshares
* 7.1 The norms of the economics profession
* 7.1.1 How scholars choose research topics
* 7.1.2 How Sovietology fit in
* 7.1.3 Military topics out of favor with economists
* 7.1.4 Dressing military buildup in fashionable civvies
* 7.2 Looking for the essence of socialism
* 7.3 Politics
* 7.3.1 The politics and economics of science
* 7.3.2 Can Sovietologists inform us of each other's bias?
* 7.3.3 Proliferation of digressions
* 7.3.4 Interpretation: exculpatory incantations
* 7.4 Persistence of civilianization and Soviet economic history
* Chapter 8. Civilianization elsewhere
* 8.1 Writings on German economy in the 1930s
* 8.1.1 Hitler's military economy
* 8.1.2 Rearmament in the economics journals of the time
* 8.1.3 Why economists neglected rearmament
* 8.2 (No) violence in primitive societies
* 8.3 The marginalization of military history
* Conclusion
* Appendices
* Appendix 1.1 Alternative estimates of the number of Sovietologists
* Appendix 3.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 3
* Appendix 3.2 Counting index entries in books
* Appendix 3.3. Books on the Soviet military sector (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.4. Books on particular sectors of the Soviet economy other
than external and agriculture published before 1975 (chronological
order)
* Appendix 3.5 Books on Soviet agriculture (chronological order)
* Appendix 3.6 Books on Soviet foreign economic relations
(chronological order)
* Appendix 4.1 How the literature was surveyed for chapter 4
* Appendix 8.1. How literature was surveyed for section 8.1
* BIBLIOGRAPHY