Source: Ilya REPIN. Arrest of a Propagandist. 1878
with Gerda Asmus-Bluhm, Andrei Markevich and Marvin Suesse
Governments often introduce limited political reforms to stabilize autocratic regimes, yet institutional openings frequently coincide with political violence. This paper examines when partial democratization pacifies dissent and when it instead reorganizes opposition toward clandestine activity. We study the introduction of local self-government (zemstvo) in late Imperial Russia, exploiting variation in the reform’s adoption across European Russia and its staggered implementation over time. Within treated districts, statutory voting rules generated discontinuous differences in elite control of assemblies. To measure underground mobilization, we construct and geocode a novel dataset of approximately 21,000 anti-Tsarist activists with individual-level information on social background and tactical choices. We find that the average effect of institutional opening on opposition is close to zero. However, in districts where assemblies were dominated by landed elites, reform reduced visible, low-risk dissent but increased clandestine, high-intensity violence. Where political power was less concentrated, institutional opening reduced both forms of opposition. These findings show that partial democratization can reorganize rather than reduce dissent when political inclusion is not credible.
JEL Classification: D74, E65, I25, N34, O11, P16, R12.
Presented at: PEDD Workshop University of Muenster 2026, Clio/EHA session ASSA 2026, IOS Regensburg 2025 Annual Meeting
Source: David Rumsey Map Collection
This paper investigates the effects of the Soviet Union's forced deportation of 2.8 million citizens from nine ethnic groups between 1937 and 1944. These individuals were relocated to Central Asia and Siberia and placed under a "special settler regime" that deprived them of political and administrative rights and mandated the NKVD to organize their labor relations. Using the 1956 Rehabilitation Decree as an instrument for the randomness of the rehabilitation decision, this study examines the cross-effects of this quasi-experiment on the local labor market and education sector. The results suggest that the "special settler regime" did not provide any support for non-Slavic host region populations to advance in employment or education. However, rehabilitated ethnic groups experienced positive effects on higher education and white-collar employment in both host and origin regions. Additionally, the paper investigates whether ethnic violence resulted in an upsurge of votes in the 1991 referendum to stay in the Soviet Union, as well as more protests and unrest in the late Soviet Union. The findings indicate that individuals who were deported showed more support for preserving the Soviet Union, while rehabilitated groups exhibited reduced protest behavior. However, permanently exiled groups that evaded deportation from their origin regions experienced an increase in protests and unrest, an effect that is reversed in similar magnitude for the host regions. My findings remain robust even after accounting for education, employment, and historical violence.
JEL Classification: D74, E65, I25, N34, O11, P16, R12
Presented at: the Economic History Colloquium at Humboldt University 2021, the X. ICCEES World Congress 2021 in Montreal, the SES 2022, the Clio 2022, the 6th GCEG in Dublin, CEPR Economic History Symposium 2022, the 8th IAAE 2022, 17th EACES 2022, the 8th Annual Meeting of the Danish and Scandinavian Economic Society, the CEECON 2022 in Berlin, NEUDC 2022, ASEEES 2022, ASSA 2023, RES and SES Joint Annual Meeting 2023.
This paper studies intergenerational cultural transmission when dynasties embedded in a social network strategically misrepresent their traits. A central planner operates two instruments---centralized schooling and mobility incentives---on a DeGroot network with strategic parental display. Three sets of results emerge. First, a unique Nash equilibrium in displayed traits exists, and traits converge to consensuses determined by eigenvector centrality. Second, long-run traits are necessarily convex combinations of initial traits, so the planner cannot engineer convergence to an arbitrary target; moreover, the planner's instruments decouple, with schooling steering the consensus target and mobility incentives governing only the speed of convergence. Third, under a budget constraint, optimal targeting concentrates incentives on dynasties whose cultural positions load most heavily on the convergence bottleneck. The framework is applied to three phases of East German cultural dynamics: selective pre-Wall emigration, closed-network indoctrination, and post-reunification convergence.
JEL Classification: C72, D83, D85, Z13
Presented at: 2022 ASREC conference (virtual), 2024 Workshop on Cultural Persistence and Transmission @QU Belfast
Source: ArtStore
with Theocharis N. Grigoriadis
We examine the rise of left‐wing terrorism in the Russian Empire between 1880 and 1900 and assess its long‐term impact on Russian political development. Drawing on original surveillance records from the Imperial Russian Secret Police (Okhrana), we construct local indicators of radicalization and classify anti‐Tsarist actions into low-intensity revolutionary activities (such as propaganda dissemination and organizational membership) and high-intensity political violence (including riots and targeted assassinations). We then link these measures to district-level outcomes from the 1917 Constituent Assembly elections -- the last free elections before the Soviet era -- across more than 400 districts. Our spatial analysis, which accounts for inter-district spillovers and other socio-economic factors, reveals that in the Pale of Settlement, sustained political violence shifted voting preferences toward centrist parties, while more moderate revolutionary activities bolstered support for conservative factions. These results suggest that early twentieth-century Russian society preferred stability and gradual reform over radical change. Moreover, our findings challenge conventional narratives of an inefficient Tsarist bureaucracy by highlighting the crucial role of the secret police in maintaining authoritarian resilience and in shaping the partial radicalization of political preferences.
JEL Classification: N33, N43, P20, P26, P37, P48, P51
Presented at: 2023 Summer Workshop in the Economic History and Historical Political Economy, Max-Planck PolEcon Summer Workshop, EHES 2023, EHA 2023, ASSA 2024, EHS 2024, EEA 2024, GSWG/VfS congress 2025, EPSA 2025
Latest draft will be sent out upon request: julia.zimmermann@uc3m.es