Loading Projects

« All Projects

👋 New here? This is one of many YSI projects happening around the world, all year round. All projects are hosted by members of the YSI community. They provide an opportunity to advance your knowledge, and build research collaborations around a pressing economic issue.

Virtual Project
  • This project has passed.

Peiyuan Li

Online Economic History Seminars with EHES

Start time:

February 28, 2023 @ 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Virtual Project
Event Series (See All)

EST

Location:

Online

Type:

Other

Event Series (See All)
Virtual Project
Random Event Image

YSI Presenters

Description

Peiyuan Li, PhD Candidate from the University of Colorado will present his paper "Who Lost (or Won) China? Land Reform and War Mobilization".

Abstract:

Land redistribution can be deliberately designed to trigger a civil war. How did the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) rally millions of farmers to win in 1949? The crucial step was to initiate land reform through class struggle, empowering farmers to violently take land from their landlords. Farmers desired land ownership but feared reprisals from landlords, who were backed by the Kuomintang (KMT) government. Therefore, farmers had to choose between joining the CCP’s army to defend their land, and free-riding. Adopting a difference-in-difference design and examining the death records of 566,161 Communist soldiers, I find that, for counties within 82 kilometers of KMT forces, a greater share of land redistribution to farmers encouraged farmers to fight, leading to a rise in CCP soldier deaths after land reform. However, for counties that were farther than 82 kilometers from KMT forces, a greater share of land transfer to farmers discouraged them from fighting (free-riding), resulting in fewer soldier deaths after land reform. A model of class struggle for land ownership explains the two different patterns. This paper develops a novel theory of war mobilization and partially explains the emergence of communism in the twentieth century.

Hosted by Working Group(s):

Attendees

Ana Catelén

Tamara Sokolowsky

Framjee Hathy

Not the right project for you?

Take a look at the below.

They are open for applications.

250 Years of the Wealth of Nations: New Perspectives on Adam Smith’s Political Economy

University of Glasgow
Start: 16 Jun 2026
Deadline
08 Feb 2026
Learn More

Contours Of Conflict in Africa: Economics and the Contradictions of Liberation in Southern and Central Africa

University of the Free State, Centenary Complex
Start: 28 Oct 2026
Deadline
15 May 2026 00:00:59
Learn More

Be the first to know:

Subscribe to the YSI newsletter to find out when new projects go live.