Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/111191
Title: Excess Mortality in Russia in 1868–1912 and its Historiographic Implications
Authors: Nefedov, S.
Ellman, M.
Issue Date: 2021
Publisher: Uchitel Publishing House
Uchitel Publishing House
Citation: Nefedov S. Excess Mortality in Russia in 1868–1912 and its Historiographic Implications / S. Nefedov, M. Ellman // Social Evolution and History. — 2021. — Vol. 20. — Iss. 1. — P. 173-197.
Abstract: In late imperial Russia, peasants were placed in an extremely difficult situation. The terms of the 1861 Emancipation had left them short of land and highly indebted to the government. Their rate of population growth was extremely high, and as Russia entered the demographic transition, it increased even more. The government was intent on a policy of rapid industrialization, which was ultimately to be paid for by large grain exports. This already strained situation was further complicated by three additional factors. Both the changing level of international grain prices and the weather-induced fluctuations in grain yields were external factors capable of applying severe shocks to the peasantry, and little could be done to affect their impact. The third factor was the effectiveness of the tsarist administrative machin-ery for levying taxes on the peasants and providing them with relief (Wheatcroft 1991: 128). © 2021 ‘Uchitel’ Publishing House.
Keywords: EPIDEMICS
EXCESS MORTALITY
FAMINE
FOOD CONSUMPTION
URI: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/111191
Access: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
SCOPUS ID: 85108596298
WOS ID: 000668329200007
PURE ID: 22466813
ISSN: 1681-4363
DOI: 10.30884/seh/2021.01.07
Appears in Collections:Научные публикации ученых УрФУ, проиндексированные в SCOPUS и WoS CC

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