Workshop Participants
Published on: Jun 18, 2006
Student Participants
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Mark Abbott - Cultural Anthropology (Political Economy) - University of Pittsburgh, Entrepreneurs and the New Face of Labor Control in Post-Socialist Russia
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Martin Blackwell - History - University of Indiana, Regime City of the First Category: The Experience of the Return of Soviet Power to Kyiv, Ukraine, 1943-1946
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Dinissa Duvanova - Political Science - Ohio State University, Interest Groups in the Post-Communist Transition: The Puzzle of Formation
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S.A. Greene - European Institute - London School of Economics, Civil Society and the Semi-Authoritarian State: The Logic of Interaction in the Soviet Union and Beyond
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P. Charles Hachten - History - University of Chicago, Law, Economy and the State in Soviet Russia; Property Relations in Discourse and Practice, 1941-1948
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Irina Liczek - Political Science - New School University, The Struggle for Gender Equality in Central Asia: Democracy, International Norms and Islamic Resurgence
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Stanislav Markus - Department of Government - Harvard University, Domestic Opportunism and Global Convergence
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Carroll Patterson - Sociology - Johns Hopkins University, Analyzing Property Rights Reform in Moldova and Georgia
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Natalia Roudakova - Cultural and Social Anthropology - Stanford University, Russian Journalists in Search of their Public: The Cultural Transformation of a Profession after Socialism
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Jennifer Smith - History and Social Study of Science and Technology, The Soviet Farm Complex: Socialist Agriculture in an International Context, 1946-1965
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Anita Seth - History - Yale University, "Spending the Hopes of Our Children": The Military-Industrial Complex in Comparative Local Perspective, 1941-1964
Faculty Participants
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Cynthia Buckley-Department of Sociology, The University of Texas, Austin
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Timothy Colton-Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University
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Martha Lampland- Department of Sociology, University of California, San Diego
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Beth Mitchneck-Department of Geography and Regional Development, University of Arizona, Tucson
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Mark von Hagen-Department of History, Columbia University
Social Science Research Council