Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace. — Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1968. — 392 p
An Empirical Examination of Foreign Concessions and Technological TransfersCaucasus Oil Fields-The Key to Economic Recovery
Coal and Anthracite Mining Industries
Early DetJelopment of the Soviet Metallurgical Industry
Non-ferrous Metal Mining and Smelting; The Manganese Concessions
Gold Mining, Platinum, Asbestos, and Minor Mineral Concessions
The Industrialization of Agriculture
Fishing, Hunting, and Canning Concessions
Restoration of the Russian Lumber Industry, 1921-30
'Sovietization' of the Tsarist Machine-Building industry
Electrical Equipment Manufacturing Industry and Goelro
Chemical, Compressed Gas, and Dye Industries
Clothing, Housing, and Food Concessions
Transportation and the Transportation Equipment industries
German-Russian Military Cooperation and Technology
Soviet Trading Companies and the Acquisition of Foreign Markets
The Significance of Foreign Concessiom and Technological TransfersThe Foreign Firm and the' Arm's Length Hypothesis'
Organized and Disorganized governments: The State Department and the Acquisition of technology
The Necessity for Foreign Technology and the Process of Acquisition
The Western Contribution to Soviet Production and Productivity, 1917-30
The Significance of Foreign Technology and Concessions for Soviet Exports
A Guide to Sources of Material
List of Operating Concessions, 1920 to 1930
Selected bibliography