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01865 (2)84629. mark.harrison@history.ox.ac.uk. Professor Harrison is prepared to supervise students with interests that lie in the areas of military and colonial medicine, or more generally in the history of disease, from c.1800 onwards. Mark Harrison has published widely on the history of disease and medicine, especially in relation to the ...
Mark Harrison was a research fellow and a former national fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is an economic historian and specialist in Soviet affairs, affiliated with the Hoover Institution Workshop on Totalitarian Regimes led by Hoover research fellow Paul R. Gregory.
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Russia and the Soviet blocDefence and securityFighting, cheating, stealing, lying, and spyingView a list of my current papers | publicationsView my author pages on Amazon | goodreadsMy blog about economics, public policy, and international affairsFellow of the British AcademyFellow of the Academy of Social SciencesResearch fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy ResearchAdvisory board member, Economic Conflict and Competition Research Group, Kings College London and Defence Academy of the UKMy blogMy Twitter accountMy photographsMy survival guidefor department chairsHarrison, Mark. 2003. The Political Economy of a Soviet Military R&D Failure: Steam Power for Aviation, 1932 to 1939. Journal of Economic History (ISSN: 0022-0507) 63:1, pp. 178-212. DOI: 10.1017/S0022050703001773. Postprint. Reprinted in Mark Harrison, The Economics of Coercion and Conflict, pp. 261-302. London: World Scientific, 2015.
582. 1999. The economics of World War II: six great powers in international comparison. M Harrison. Cambridge University Press. , 2000. 421. 2000. Gemcitabine and capecitabine with or without telomerase peptide vaccine GV1001 in patients with locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer (TeloVac): an open-label ….
History of Health, Medicine, and Disease mark harrison Summary: The emergence of global history has been one of the more notable features of academic history over the past three decades. Although historians of disease were among the pioneers of one of its earlier incarnations—world his-