Adam Leeds on the Development of Soviet and Russian Economics, Episode 12

In this episode, Adam Leeds talks with Reinhard about his thesis “Spectral Liberalism: On the Subject of Political Economy in Moscow”, for which Adam won the 2018 “Joseph Dorfman Best Dissertation Prize” awarded by the History of Economics Society. We talk about the development of Soviet and Russian economics and its relationship with politics starting from the late tsarist era, the Soviet Union under first Lenin and Stalin, the post-Stalin era, Gorbachev’s reforms, ending with the development in the 1990s and early 2000s. The topics we discuss include Adam’s research approach of oral history, methodological issues about conducting interviews in Russia, and the relationship between anthropology and the history of economic thought.

Adam is an anthropologist (with an interest in the history of economics) and an assistant professor at Department of Slavic Languages at Columbia University.

2 thoughts on “Adam Leeds on the Development of Soviet and Russian Economics, Episode 12

  1. Very interesting! The breakup of Mathemstical Economics and Operations Research still has to fully materialise in our Dutch Econometrics/Quantitative Economics departments. Our best OR student is now Associate Professor in Columbia’s Engineering department….

  2. Pingback: Till Düppe on Economics in the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), Episode 21 | Ceteris Never Paribus: The History of Economic Thought Podcast

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