6th International ICSID Conference «Political Economy of Development: Exiting the Middle Income Trap»
6th Annual Conference of the International Center for the Study of Institutions and Development (ICSID) “Political Economy of Development: Exiting the Middle Income Trap” was held at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow on June 13-14, 2017.
This year’s event attracted a record number of speakers from the world's top universities and research centers, such as Emory University, Yale, University of Wisconsin-Madison, University College London, Stanford, New York University, Higher School of Economics and Columbia University. A total of 35 papers were presented by both Russian and foreign experts in the fields of political economy, and economic and institutional development. Topics discussed at the conference ranged from political science to economics, and included economic growth in autocracies, problems of economic and political transformation, corruption, political elites, and effects of historical legacies on development and social capital.
I really enjoyed this year's conference. First, it's amazing that this is already the 6th successful ICSID conference, time has been passing so fast. I still remember the first one I attended in 2013, and this has been my 5th. Quality-wise, we had a steady improvement, with the conference this year being clearly the one with the highest quality so far. The fact that we had a record number of applications from good researchers shows that the conference has established itself as a central event in the yearly conference calendar (people now talk about going to the ICSID conference as they talk about going to ASEEES or ISNIE/SIOE). Personally, I enjoyed for example Egor Lazarev's presentation on Chechnya, Daniel Thomas' paper on the behaviour of autocrats during regime failure, and also Tim Frye's presentation on sanctions and the new book by Josh Tucker.
I really liked the panel on Historical Legacies and Development. I received helpful feedback from the audience who were knowledgeable in population movements in Russia, China, and elsewhere in the world. The audience had great interest in applying rigorous statistical strategies and in theorizing how historical legacies affect contemporary political developments. I think the conference was very well-organized, from the point of call for papers to visa support, and to when the conference happened. The coffee break was amazing. I enjoyed the conference, and appreciated all the travel support and paper comments I got!
Ruxi Zhang
PhD Student, Stanford University
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Michael Rochlitz
Research fellow in the Department of Sociology at the Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich