Columbia University, PhD 1994

Yanni Kotsonis
Professor of History & Russian & Slavic Studies
Russian, Soviet and global political economy; history of taxation in Russia and the world; contemporary economic theory, liberalism, and neoliberalism; the Greek Revolution in global context.
Raised in Athens and educated in Montreal, Copenhagen, London, and Moscow, he teaches on Russia, the USSR, political economy, and dystopianism. His forthcoming book it titled The Greek Revolution: An Imperial Story. He is the founding director of the Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia and father to three children.
Awards
- 2021 Berlin Prize, American Academy in Berlin
- 2015 Winner, Wallace K. Ferguson Prize, Canadian Historical Association for the best book in a topic outside Canadian history, for States of Obligation
- Winner, Ed A. Hewett Book Prize for an outstanding monograph on the political economy of Russia, Eurasia, and/or Eastern Europe, for States of Obligation
- Honorable Mention, the Davis Center Book Prize, sponsored by the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard, for an outstanding monograph on Russia, Eurasia or Eastern Europe in anthropology, political science, sociology, or geography
Books
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[The Greek Revolution and the Empires: France the Greeks, 1797-1830]Athens: Alexandria Press, 2020
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NLO, 2006
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Making Peasants Backward. Agricultural Cooperatives and the Agrarian Question in Russia, 1861 - 1914Macmillan, 1999
Articles
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Taxes and the Two Faces of the State since the Eighteenth CenturyState Formations, John Brook et alCambridge, (2018)
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Ordinary People in Russian and Soviet HistoryKritika, 12:3(Summer 2011), pp.739-54
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The Problem of the Individual in the Stolypin ReformsKritika, 12:1(Winter 2011), pp.25-52
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A European Experience: Human Rights and Citizenship in Revolutionary RussiaHuman Rights and RevolutionsBowman and LIttlefield (2007)
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'No Place to Go': Taxation and State Transformation in Late Imperial and Early Soviet RussiaThe Journal of Modern History, 76(2004), pp.531-577
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'Face to Face': The State, the Individual, and the Citizen in Imperial Russian Taxation, 1863-1917Slavic Review, 63:2(2004), pp. 221-46
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The Ideology of Martin MaliaRussian Review, 58:1(January 1999), pp.124-30.
Contact Information
Yanni Kotsonis
Professor of History & Russian & Slavic Studies yanni.kotsonis@nyu.edu 53 Washington Square South, Room 601Phone: (212) 998-8605
Office Hours: By Appointment Only