Integrating imperial space : : the Russian customs system in the 19th century / / Boris Ganichev.

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Place / Publishing House:Göttingen, Germany : : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,, [2023]
©2023
Year of Publication:2023
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spelling Ganichev, Boris, author.
Integrating imperial space : the Russian customs system in the 19th century / Boris Ganichev.
1st ed.
Göttingen, Germany : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, [2023]
©2023
1 online resource (280 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Schnittstellen
Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Russia's Trade and Tariff Policies in the 19th Century -- 1.1 Egor Kankrin and Prohibitionism -- 1.2 The 1850s Tariff Revisions and Liberalization -- 1.3 "Free-Traders" Versus "Protectionists" -- 1.4 Mikhail Reitern and Tariff Liberalization during the Great Reforms -- 1.5 Nikolai Bunge: A Liberal in Conservative Waters -- 1.6 Sergey Vitte: Towards an Integrated Empire -- 1.7 Conclusion -- 2. Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion.
5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration -- 5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index -- Title Page -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Russia's Trade and Tariff Policies in the 19th Century -- 1.1 Egor Kankrin and Prohibitionism -- 1.2 The 1850s Tariff Revisions and Liberalization -- 1.3 "Free-Traders" Versus "Protectionists" -- 1.4 Mikhail Reitern and Tariff Liberalization during the Great Reforms.
1.5 Nikolai Bunge: A Liberal in Conservative Waters -- 1.6 Sergey Vitte: Towards an Integrated Empire -- 1.7 Conclusion -- 2. Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration.
5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index.
Description based on print version record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Infrastructure (Economics)
Print version: Ganichev, Boris Integrating Imperial Space Göttingen : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,c2023 9783525302088
Schnittstellen.
language English
format eBook
author Ganichev, Boris,
spellingShingle Ganichev, Boris,
Integrating imperial space : the Russian customs system in the 19th century /
Schnittstellen
Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Russia's Trade and Tariff Policies in the 19th Century -- 1.1 Egor Kankrin and Prohibitionism -- 1.2 The 1850s Tariff Revisions and Liberalization -- 1.3 "Free-Traders" Versus "Protectionists" -- 1.4 Mikhail Reitern and Tariff Liberalization during the Great Reforms -- 1.5 Nikolai Bunge: A Liberal in Conservative Waters -- 1.6 Sergey Vitte: Towards an Integrated Empire -- 1.7 Conclusion -- 2. Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion.
5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration -- 5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index -- Title Page -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Russia's Trade and Tariff Policies in the 19th Century -- 1.1 Egor Kankrin and Prohibitionism -- 1.2 The 1850s Tariff Revisions and Liberalization -- 1.3 "Free-Traders" Versus "Protectionists" -- 1.4 Mikhail Reitern and Tariff Liberalization during the Great Reforms.
1.5 Nikolai Bunge: A Liberal in Conservative Waters -- 1.6 Sergey Vitte: Towards an Integrated Empire -- 1.7 Conclusion -- 2. Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration.
5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index.
author_facet Ganichev, Boris,
author_variant b g bg
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Ganichev, Boris,
title Integrating imperial space : the Russian customs system in the 19th century /
title_sub the Russian customs system in the 19th century /
title_full Integrating imperial space : the Russian customs system in the 19th century / Boris Ganichev.
title_fullStr Integrating imperial space : the Russian customs system in the 19th century / Boris Ganichev.
title_full_unstemmed Integrating imperial space : the Russian customs system in the 19th century / Boris Ganichev.
title_auth Integrating imperial space : the Russian customs system in the 19th century /
title_new Integrating imperial space :
title_sort integrating imperial space : the russian customs system in the 19th century /
series Schnittstellen
series2 Schnittstellen
publisher Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,
publishDate 2023
physical 1 online resource (280 pages)
edition 1st ed.
contents Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Russia's Trade and Tariff Policies in the 19th Century -- 1.1 Egor Kankrin and Prohibitionism -- 1.2 The 1850s Tariff Revisions and Liberalization -- 1.3 "Free-Traders" Versus "Protectionists" -- 1.4 Mikhail Reitern and Tariff Liberalization during the Great Reforms -- 1.5 Nikolai Bunge: A Liberal in Conservative Waters -- 1.6 Sergey Vitte: Towards an Integrated Empire -- 1.7 Conclusion -- 2. Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion.
5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration -- 5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index -- Title Page -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Russia's Trade and Tariff Policies in the 19th Century -- 1.1 Egor Kankrin and Prohibitionism -- 1.2 The 1850s Tariff Revisions and Liberalization -- 1.3 "Free-Traders" Versus "Protectionists" -- 1.4 Mikhail Reitern and Tariff Liberalization during the Great Reforms.
1.5 Nikolai Bunge: A Liberal in Conservative Waters -- 1.6 Sergey Vitte: Towards an Integrated Empire -- 1.7 Conclusion -- 2. Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration.
5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index.
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callnumber-first H - Social Science
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Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration -- 5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index -- Title Page -- Table of Contents -- Body -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Russia's Trade and Tariff Policies in the 19th Century -- 1.1 Egor Kankrin and Prohibitionism -- 1.2 The 1850s Tariff Revisions and Liberalization -- 1.3 "Free-Traders" Versus "Protectionists" -- 1.4 Mikhail Reitern and Tariff Liberalization during the Great Reforms.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1.5 Nikolai Bunge: A Liberal in Conservative Waters -- 1.6 Sergey Vitte: Towards an Integrated Empire -- 1.7 Conclusion -- 2. Expansion by Debordering: The Dissolution of the Orenburg Customs Line -- 2.1 18th Century Tariff Policies on the Empire's South-Eastern Borders -- 2.2 Trade and Customs Reform Initiatives under Alexander I -- 2.3 The Continental Blockade and Russia's Trade Policies on its "European" borders -- 2.4 New Departures in "Asiatic Trade" under Alexander I and the "Asiatic tariff" of 1817 -- 2.5 The Steppe Conquest and Trade Deregulation -- 2.6 The First Debate on the Customs Border Relocation -- 2.7 The 1867 "Asiatic" Tariff Revision -- 2.8 The Dissolution of the Steppe Customs Border -- 2.9 Conclusion -- 3. Closing the Gap: Bukhara's Loss of Trade Autonomy -- 3.1 Central Asian Space and Early Economic Visions -- 3.2 Economic Visions of the 1860s and Limits of Implementation -- 3.3 Fragmented Customs Regulations on the Periphery -- 3.4 The Integration of Central Asian Economic Space -- 3.5 Shaping Global Trade Currents -- 3.6 Conclusion -- 4. Ob' and Enisei Porto-Franco: A Latecomer's Frustration -- 4.1 The Far-Eastern Porto-Franco: From Seminal Concept to National Nuisance -- 4.2 Exploration, Private Initiative, and the "Nationalization" of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.3 The Establishment of the Northern Sea Route -- 4.4 The Northern Sea Route and the Trans-Siberian Railway -- 4.5 The Northern Sea Route between Imperial and Regional Interests -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 5. Insular Administration and the Economic Integration of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.1 The Establishment of the Caucasian Viceroyalty -- 5.2 Early Attempts at Economic Regulation -- 5.3 Quarantine Control as Function of Customs Institutions -- 5.4 Last Attempt for the Introduction of a Linear Logic of Administration.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5.5 Insular Administration as Accelerator for Integration -- 5.6 The Customs Integration of the Transcaucasus -- 5.7 Conclusion -- 6. The Transcaucasian Transit: Stepping Stone to the World or the Empire's Backyard Market? -- 6.1 The Introduction and the First Prohibition of the Transcaucasian Transit -- 6.2 The Rise of the Transit Route under the Namestnichestvo -- 6.3 Central Asia and the Caspian Sea - A New Spatial Vision -- 6.4 The Transcaucasian Transit in a Nationally Charged Discourse -- 6.5 The Aftermath of the 1883 Transit Route Closure -- 6.6 Conclusion -- 7. The Finnish Customs Space: Nation-Building within a Nationalizing Empire -- 7.1 The Autonomous Status of the Grand Duchy of Finland -- 7.2 Finnish Customs Policies before the 1890s -- 7.3 Finno-Russian Relations during the 1880s-Industrial Crisis -- 7.4 The 1890s Geiden Commission on Full Customs-Integration -- 7.5 Renewed Attempts at Customs Integration -- 7.6 Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- I. Archival Sources -- II. Newspapers, Journals, Reference Works and Legislative Texts -- III. Published Sources -- IV. Secondary Literature -- List of Illustrations -- Index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on print version record.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="650" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Infrastructure (Economics)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1="0" ind2="8"><subfield code="i">Print version:</subfield><subfield code="a">Ganichev, Boris</subfield><subfield code="t">Integrating Imperial Space</subfield><subfield code="d">Göttingen : Vandenhoeck &amp; Ruprecht,c2023</subfield><subfield code="z">9783525302088</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Schnittstellen.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="906" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">BOOK</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="ADM" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">2023-07-08 06:53:16 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="f">system</subfield><subfield code="c">marc21</subfield><subfield code="a">2023-05-17 11:39:38 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="g">false</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="AVE" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="i">Vandenhoeck &amp; Ruprecht Journals</subfield><subfield code="P">Vandenhoeck And Ruprecht Complete</subfield><subfield code="x">https://eu02.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/uresolver/43ACC_OEAW/openurl?u.ignore_date_coverage=true&amp;portfolio_pid=5346046460004498&amp;Force_direct=true</subfield><subfield code="Z">5346046460004498</subfield><subfield code="b">Available</subfield><subfield code="8">5346046460004498</subfield></datafield></record></collection>