Forced labor in Soviet industry: the end of the 1930s to the mid-1950s: an overview / Andrei Sokolov -- The economy of the OGPU, NKVD, and MVD of the USSR, 1930-1953: the scale, structure, and trends of development / Oleg Khlevnyuk -- The end of the gulag / Aleksei Tikhonov -- Coercion versus motivation: forced labor in Norilsk / Leonid Borodkin and Simon Ertz -- Magadan and the economic history of Dalstroi in the 1930s / David Nordlander -- Building Norilsk / Simon Ertz -- The White Sea-Baltic canal / Mikhail Morukov -- The gulag in Karelia: 1929 to 1941 / Christopher Joyce
Summary
"The authors examine the various forms of coercion and the channels through which coerced labor was distributed from the late 1930s to Stalin's death in 1953 and reveal why the Gulag emerged and its perceived economic rationale. They detail the chronology of the Gulag from the first major projects - such as the White Sea - Baltic Canal and the Norilsk metallurgy complex - to later, unfinished plans. The book reveals how Soviet leadership desperately sought to find the right balance between coercion and material incentives for the labor force - and how material incentives played an increasingly greater role in later years
We also learn of the day-to-day costs of maintaining the Gulag and the great costs of coercion - lost productivity and rising criminality."--Jacket