The Price of Aid: The Economic Cold War in India

David Engerman (Yale U)

In his recently published book The Price of Aid: The Economic Cold War in India, on which he will present insights at the colloquium, Prof. David C. Engerman has both combined and further developed these interests by investigating the competing and entangled histories of Soviet and US-American engagements in India for setting up a new framework for development aid in the context of the Cold War and decolonization. Hence, his talk might offer a number of connecting points to those interested in 20th century history, East-West-South relations, questions of development and inequality, international politics or the role of experts in these contexts.

Biographical Note
Prof. David Engerman (Department of History, Yale University, USA)
David C. Engerman is a scholar of twentieth-century international history. Building on his dual training in American and Russian/Soviet history at the University of California, Berkeley (where he received his PhD in 1998), he wrote two books on the place of Russia and the USSR in American intellectual and political life: Modernization from the Other Shore: American Intellectuals and the Romance of Russian Development (Harvard UP, 2003) and Know Your Enemy: The Rise and Fall of America’s Soviet Experts (Oxford UP, 2009).
He has also researched and written on a variety of topics related to the history of development assistance, including a co-edited volume, Staging Growth: Modernization, Development and the Global Cold War (U-Mass Press, 2003), and most recently a monograph, The Price of Aid: The Economic Cold War in India (Harvard UP, 2018). This research was also the topic of his presidential address for the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations in 2016. Research for The Price of Aid was supported by grants and fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Institute of Indian Studies, the American Philosophical Society, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, the National Council for Eurasian and East European Studies, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Eisenhower, Johnson and Truman presidential libraries.

Engerman joins the faculty at Yale after nineteen years at Brandeis University. His new research focuses on the geopolitics of international economic inequality in the second half of the twentieth century.

Source and further information: Yale U, https://history.yale.edu/people/david-engerman (12 December 2018).