This book on Russia examines historical reforms and interventions affecting agriculture and assesses their impact on the rural economy.This book on Russia examines the history of reforms and state interventions affecting agriculture. It looks at the reform process in a crisis and analyzes the short-run effects of economic adversity. It also examines agricultural production and rural institutions in the long run from 1861 to the present.This book on Russia examines the history of reforms and state interventions affecting agriculture. It looks at the reform process in a crisis and analyzes the short-run effects of economic adversity. It also examines agricultural production and rural institutions in the long run from 1861 to the present.This book examines the history of reforms and major state interventions affecting Russian agriculture: the abolition of serfdom in 1861, the Stolypin reforms, the NEP, the Collectivization, Khrushchev reforms, and finally farm enterprise privatization in the early 1990s. It shows a pattern emerging from a political imperative in imperial, Soviet, and post-Soviet regimes, and it describes how these reforms were justified in the name of the national interest during severe crises rapid inflation, military defeat, mass strikes, rural unrest, and/or political turmoil. It looks at the consequences of adversity in the economic environment for rural behavior after reform and at long-run trends. It has chapters on property rights, rural organization, and technological change. It provides a new database for measuring agricultural productivity from 1861 to 1913 and updates these estimates to the present. This book is a study of the policies aimed at reorganizing rural production and their effectiveness in transforming institutions.Part I. Dilemmas of Agrarian Reform in Russia: 1. Imperial reform, 18611913; 2. The NEP and Soviet era reforms, 192189; 3. Transition agrarian reform, 19912008; Part II. Russian Law and Rural Organization, 1861200lS¶