Pyotr Maslov in 1906

Pyotr Pavlovich Maslov (Russian: Пётр Павлович Маслов; 15 (27) July 1867 Maslovka - 4 June 1946 Moscow) was a Russian and Soviet economist and agriculturist.[1]

Biography

Maslov attended at the Kharkov Veterinary Institute. He was in contact with the Marxist study circle of Nikolai Fedoseev, a contact which led to his arrest in 1889.[1] He joined the Menshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, and became a spokesperson on agrarian reform. He advocated the municipalisation of the land, in order to appeal to the peasantry by expropriating the land without compensation, and making it available to them cheaply, without giving them ownership. This was similar to a proposal by Lenin, except the latter wanted the land owned by central government.[2]

After the defeat of the 1905 Russian Revolution he became a liquidationist and collaborated with Alexander Potresov. During the First World War he became a defencisit. After the February Revolution, as a member of the Central Land Committee, he took part in the preparation of the land law. He was a member of the administrative committee of the League of Agrarian Reforms. Maslov was a member of the Provisional Council of the Republic. After the October Revolution he held an anti-Bolshevik and was a commissar in the Provisional Siberian Government and participated in the State Meeting in Ufa.

Subsequently Maslov came in to terms with the new Soviet government and became involved in science activity.

In November 1918 he was appointed professor at the Omsk Agricultural Institute in the Department of Political Economy and Statistics. From1923 1926 he was a professor at the Moscow State University and the Plekhanov Institute of National Economy. From 1924 to 1929 he worked at the Institute of Economics at the Russian Association of Social Science Research Institutes (RANION). In 1929 he was elected a full member of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union.

He was involved in the case of the Union Bureau of the Mensheviks. On 25 April 1931 he was released from custody and exiled outside Moscow for three years. When the case was reviewed on 30 April 1931 Maslov was relieved from all charges.

He was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery.[1]

Family

Maslov's son Pavel Petrovich Maslov  is a renowned statistician, head of the Department of Statistics of the Moscow Financial Institute. His grandson Victor Maslov, mathematician and physicist, academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Figurovskaia, N. K. "Maslov, Petr Pavlovich". TheFreeDictionary.com. The Gale Group. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  2. Service, Robert (2010). Stalin: A Biography. London: Pan Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-330-47637-9.
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