Cookies?
Library Header Image
LSE Research Online LSE Library Services

Commerce and demolition in Tsarist and Soviet Russia: lessons for theories of trade politics and the philosophy of social science

Woodruff, David M. ORCID: 0000-0001-7503-8052 (2005) Commerce and demolition in Tsarist and Soviet Russia: lessons for theories of trade politics and the philosophy of social science. Review of International Political Economy, 12 (2). pp. 199-225. ISSN 0969-2290

Full text not available from this repository.
Identification Number: 10.1080/096922905000105441

Abstract

Leaders of commodity-exporting states will sometimes push exports even when world prices are declining, if export receipts allow access to international capital markets. This article demonstrates that such state-mediated ties between commodity and capital markets shaped the politics of foreign trade in tsarist, and then Soviet, Russia. It also refutes an alternate, group-centered explanation of the same historical cases proposed in Rogowski's Commerce and Coalitions, pointing out serious empirical errors and oversights. These empirical problems have methodological roots. Searching for universal "laws," rather than sometimes relevant "mechanisms," limits the consideration of counterhypotheses to those that apply to a whole universe of cases, rather than a subset of them. Because such counterhypotheses serve to determine which data are relevant, their exclusion weakens the empirical tests to which proposed laws are subjected. Thus, the ambition for generality may cause scholars to become inadvertently too generous to the theories they seek to test.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: http://www.tandfdc.com/journals/titles/09692290.as...
Additional Information: © 2005 Taylor & Francis
Divisions: Government
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HC Economic History and Conditions
D History General and Old World > DK Russia. Soviet Union. Former Soviet Republics
Date Deposited: 19 Feb 2008
Last Modified: 01 Nov 2024 05:16
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/3473

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item