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The Alaska
World Affairs Council
Presents
Marshall I. Goldman
Kathryn Wasserman Davis
Professor of Russian
Economics (Emeritus),
Wellesley College
Senior Scholar, Davis Center
for Russian and Eurasian
Studies, Harvard University

"Petrostate:
Putin, Power and the New
Russia."
Friday,
27th March, 2009 – Hilton
Hotel
Doors open at 11:30 a.m. -
Program begins at 12:00 p.m.
For Reservations
RSVP by Wednesday, 25th
March to the Alaska World
Affairs Council
by telephone 276-8038 or by
email to
AlaskaWorldAffairs.org
.
Lunch Program $20 for
Members - $25 for
Non-Members - $6 for Coffee
Only Marshall
I. Goldman is Kathryn
Wasserman Davis Professor of
Russian Economics (Emeritus)
at Wellesley College. An
expert on the Russian
economy and the economics of
high technology, he joined
the Wellesley faculty in
1958. In 1998, the Wellesley
College Alumnae Association
awarded him its first
Faculty Service Award. He
was also Associate Director
of the Davis Center for
Russian Studies at Harvard
University from 1975 to
2006.
Professor Goldman is a 1952
graduate of the Wharton
School of the University of
Pennsylvania and received
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in
Russian studies and
economics from Harvard
University in 1956 and 1961,
respectively. He was awarded
an honorary Doctor of Laws
degree from the University
of Massachusetts, Amherst,
in 1985.
An internationally
recognized authority on
Russian economics, politics,
and environmental policy,
Professor Goldman is known
for his study and analysis
of the careers of Mikhail
Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin.
He is the author of over a
dozen books on the former
Soviet Union, including The
USSR in Crisis: The Failure
of an Economic System, and
Gorbachev's Challenge:
Economic Reform in the Age
of High Technology (1987),
in which he envisioned the
monumental problems that
would confront Perestroika
and which threw the country
into economic and political
turmoil. His works also
include What Went Wrong with
Perestroika: The Rise and
Fall of Mikhail Gorbachev
(W.W. Norton, 1991),
monographs entitled Lost
Opportunity: Why Economic
Reforms in Russia Have Not
Worked (W.W. Norton, 1994)
and Lost Opportunity: What
Has Made Economic Reform in
Russia So Difficult (Norton,
1996), and The Piratization
of Russia: Russian Reform
Goes Awry (Rutledge, 2003).
His most recent book is
Petrolstate: Putin, Power
and the New Russia (Oxford
University Press, April
2008).
A frequent visitor to the
republics of the former
Soviet Union, Professor
Goldman was present during
the August, 1991, coup
attempt. He has met with
Mikhail Gorbachev, Vladimir
Putin, former President
George Bush, and President
George W. Bush and continues
to meet regularly with
business leaders, diplomats,
and government officials at
the highest levels in both
countries.
Dr. Goldman taught American
economics to students and
general audiences while a
Fulbright-Hayes Lecturer at
Moscow State University in
1977; and in 1980s, he was
invited by the U.S.
Ambassador to the former
Soviet Union to deliver a
series of lectures on behalf
of the U.S. Government. He
also has spoken on several
invitational tours in China
and has lectured throughout
Western Europe and Asia.
A consulting editor to the
journal Current History,
Goldman's expertise is also
sought by the media. He has
writen frequently for such
publications as Current
History, Foreign Affairs,
The New York Times, The
Washington Post, and The
Harvard Business Review. His
articles have also appeared
in The New Yorker, The
Atlantic Monthly, and
Science, and he has been a
frequent guest on CNN and
"Good Morning America." He
has appeared on "The MacNeil/Lehrer
NewsHour," "Crossfire,"
"Face the Nation," "The
Today Show," and"
Nightline." He has written
regularly for the Russian
newspapers, Moscow News and
The Moscow Times, and is
often heard on National
Public Radio.
In 1991, Professor Goldman
was elected a Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and
Sciences. He has been a
consultant to the State
Department, the
Environmental Protection
Agency, the Council on
Environmental Quality, the
Ford Foundation, and
numerous corporations. A
director of the Century Bank
and Trust Company, the
Jamestown Foundation and
Trustee of Northeast
Investors, Professor Goldman
is a member of the Council
on Foreign Relations and the
American Economic
Association. Professor
Goldman has served as a
trustee of the Noble and
Greenough School as well as
The Commonwealth School of
Boston and is past president
of the Hillel Council of
Greater Boston. He is also
past president of the early
music group, Boston Baroque.
A longtime resident of
Wellesley, Massachusetts,
Marshall Goldman was an
elected member of the
Wellesley Town Meeting and
also served on the town's
Conservation Commission as
well as the Incinerator
Study Committee.
Marshall Goldman and his
wife, Merle, a professor
emerita of Chinese history
at Boston University, are
the parents of four
children.
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