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Protectionism and Free Trade: Key Issues in International Trade Policy

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Protectionism and Free Trade: Key Issues in International Trade Policy
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A renowned economist and historian of the national economy. He was born in Kyiv, the son of the lawyer and ethnographer M. I. Kulisher. In 1900, he graduated from the Law Faculty of St. Petersburg University. In 1908, he defended his master's thesis and began teaching economic history at St. Petersburg University and other universities. He published in Russkoe Bogatstvo, Russkaya Mysl, Russkoe Ekonomicheskoe Obozreniye, and other journals. From 1909 to 1912, he was a member of the Council of the Free Economic Society and deputy chairman of its third section. In 1915, he was elected professor at the Psychoneurological Institute. From 1921 to 1924, he was director of the Economic Research Institute. From 1930 to 1931, he was head of the Department of Applied Economics at the Leningrad Institute of Finance and Economics.

I. M. Kulischer is the author of numerous works on the economic history of the Middle Ages and the early modern period. He can effectively be considered one of the founders of economic history as a discipline in Russia; he was one of the first to represent economic history as an independent discipline. Many of his historical and economic works, which collected and systematized a wealth of factual material, have become classics. He also made a significant contribution to the development of Russian traditions in the teaching of economic history. His research has been noted by many renowned scholars, including the outstanding Russian economist M. I. Tugan-Baranovsky and the renowned French economic historian F. Braudel. The latter, when working on his famous three-volume work, Material Civilization, Economy, and Capitalism: The 15th–18th Centuries, used I. M. Kulischer's Lectures on the History of the Economic Life of Western Europe, considering it "to this day the best guide and most reliable of all generalizing works."
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